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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a huge reduction of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing a significant decrease in quantity, size, or extent of something.
Example: "The company announced a huge reduction of its workforce due to budget cuts."
Alternatives: "a significant decrease in" or "a major cut in".
Exact(12)
The results of the simplified model, which allows a huge reduction of the computational effort, are successfully benchmarked against those of a comprehensive thermal hydraulic simulation.
A vast volumetric swelling up to 40%, and thus a huge reduction of the bending strength, was observed during the storage of specimens in PBS.
As shown in Figure 3, the microstructures of coarse and milled powders showed a huge reduction of the size of nanopowders from the micropowder.
Trace-driven simulation results show that the proposed protocol improves data delivery in VANETs and has a huge reduction of destination location updates than existing routing protocols.
It performs the optimization of only two parameters (instead of ) leading to a huge reduction of the computational complexity for large.
Firstly, strain maps of the regions away from the InAs QDs had revealed a huge reduction of the strain fields with the N incorporation but a higher inhomogeneity, which points to a composition modulation enhancement with the presence of Sb-rich and Sb-poor regions in the range of a few nanometers.
Similar(48)
The result is a huge reduction in thickness of sheets without the use of saws.
Her grave concern is that while some corals prove resilient to warmer seas, the "butterfly effect" of others dying off will trigger "a huge reduction in richness of species on the reef".
Rifkin helps us see the outlines of that world, which in part depends on new technologies such as 3D printing which holds the promise of a huge reduction in the footprint of human consumption.
The results indicated a huge reduction in viscosity of bitumen by increasing the temperature and/or dissolving the solvent.
By being more aggressive and completely eliminating mechanical cooling, operators can release either substantial capital cost savings or increased IT equipment capacity – indeed we found that the benefit of cutting out mechanical cooling is a huge reduction in the cost of delivering each kWh of IT equipment power (and let's be honest that's what data centres actually do) – by up to 20%.
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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