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The phrase "a means to deploy" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing methods or tools for implementing or launching something, such as a strategy, software, or resources.
Example: "The new software provides a means to deploy updates more efficiently across all devices."
Alternatives: "a method to implement" or "a way to launch".
Exact(2)
Additionally, many of these tools do not have out of the box support for cloud environments and would necessitate the devising of a means to deploy and manage them on the cloud.
[sally4] 3. What first strikes the appraisal analyst here is the way in which the attitudinal density (Don 2007: 177) of the excerpt (in which attitudes are nominalised/presumed rather than argued) functions as a means to deploy these as targets of the attitude at the clause rank.
Similar(58)
Cloud computing has quickly become the de facto means to deploy large scale systems in a robust and cost effective manner.
For instance, adding a component can mean to deploy it on a particular slot of the system that requires an specific interface, or it can mean to connect a new component with an already deployed one, among others.
Crammed into the tiny Soyuz capsule with two crewmates from the International Space Station, Peake watched the clock tick past the time when the main parachute was meant to deploy with a reassuring tug.
"What does it mean to deploy one of these in a library, a public square, someone's bedroom?
This suggested that the capsule's landing bag, which was meant to deploy upon splashdown in order to provide a cushion, might have deployed early.
Instead, the union is now creating 13 smaller and more flexible formations of 1,500 men, known as battlegroups, which are meant to deploy in troublespots within ten days.
The most worrisome danger today is the risk of a terrorist gang obtaining a nuclear weapon and the means to deploy it against a Western or Western- allied target.
The "debt ceiling" is like the "fiscal cliff" in at least one important way -- it's a metaphor that doesn't describe what's actually going on, while being simultaneously easy to deploy as a means to drive panic.
Recently divorced service members may be more likely to volunteer to deploy as a means to escape emotional hardship, although this study did not collect data on reasons for deployment.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com