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Discover Ludwig"a huge probability" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to refer to a high likelihood of something happening, usually in a quantitative context such as math or statistics. For example, "The forecast predicted a huge probability of rain for the day."
Exact(2)
His experience had led him to confirm that upcycling was a labour intensive, time consuming and a costly process with a huge probability of consumer's subjective disappointment.
In a linear radio network-based CR network, the patterns of data transmission and reception of a primary user (PU) can be assumed by the continuity of k linear equations, and thus a secondary user (SU) can predict the duration of PU's frequency use in a huge probability [2, 3].
Similar(58)
"There's a huge, huge probability that Ty will not play tomorrow," North Carolina Coach Roy Williams said Wednesday.
"This is a huge issue," Nichols says.
"Our system is a huge statistical-probability model, but it doesn't make identifications, because it doesn't have all the information that is needed," he said.
– Scientist 3. Except, when you put a boundary on it, then people probably think if they're on one side of the boundary or the other there's a huge difference in probability when there isn't.
However, both scientists and stakeholders expressed that the boundaries between classes on the binned map (Figure 1D) could present a disadvantage if they were interpreted as non-gradational or "step-wise": Except, when you put a boundary on it, then people probably think if they're on one side of the boundary or the other there's a huge difference in probability when there isn't.
Calculations were very computer intensive, with a huge number of probability calculations needed to calculate the expected number of cases for a given parameter set.
The median forecast at Betfair.co.uk is 288 seats rather than 281 on the website, with a small probability of a huge shift with odds of 301 seats around 26 per cent, odds of 326 seats 6 per cent.
Our empirical results show that the probability of a huge loss event sharply increased during the Eurozone debt crisis, indicating a contagion effect.
Statistically, a leveraged investor who simply reinvests his or her gains at the highest level of leverage has a very high probability of taking huge losses over time.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com