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The phrase "a liable factor" is not correct in standard English; the correct term is "a liable party" or "a contributing factor." You can use it when discussing elements that may cause or influence a particular outcome, especially in legal or analytical contexts.
Example: "In the investigation, we identified a liable factor that contributed to the accident."
Alternatives: "a responsible factor" or "a significant factor."
Exact(1)
This is a clear shortfall in the diagnosis of COPD and a lack of clinical resource and training may be a liable factor in this case.
Similar(59)
A liable fake watches company must have a responsive customer care department.
A more complex factor liable to affect adoption is land tenure.
In typical discrimination cases, employers can be held liable if wrongful discrimination is a motivating factor.
Starting in the mid-1960s courts increasingly held manufacturers liable for injuries their products caused, even when user ineptitude was a contributing factor, under the theory that liability would spur the manufacturer to come up with safer designs.
Momentum is a mysterious factor, bringing with it an aura of invincibility while it lasts, but liable to plummet back to earth at any moment.
A superseding cause is one that intervenes to prevent a defendant from being liable for harm to a plaintiff that the defendant's antecedent negligence is a substantial factor in bringing about.
And a Petty God announces a woman liable to pettiness.
We have assessed in obese renal transplant recipients a course of selected proinflammatory factors liable to influence the long-term outcome of transplant patients and kidney grafts.
It is possible that raising the tax-free personal income tax allowance to £10,000 has been a factor, because people have come off benefits and into jobs that are not liable to income tax.
This section included the key items in the questionnaire: percentage of patients referred to a cancer team and list of factors liable to influence GP decisions (developed using the Delphi consensus method).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com