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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a miss of" is not commonly used in written English.
It is more common to use "a lack of" or "an absence of" to express the same idea. "A miss of" could potentially be used in spoken English, but it would sound unusual and awkward. Example: The team's loss can be attributed to a miss of teamwork and communication.
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Fitting this model to the polling data available ahead of the 2010 election produces an overestimate of Labor's TPP: 52.0%, a miss of 1.9 percentage points.
With many investors counting on earnings forecasts to be well managed by some companies, a miss of a mere penny or so can send a stock tumbling.
For instance, if a poll projected Mr. Mondale to get 45 percent of the vote after removing undecideds from the total, but he actually got 35 percent, that would be a miss of 10 percentage points.
The consensus forecast expected 363,000 lost jobs, a miss of over 100,000.
A miss of 0.2% is not that wide, but it seems everyone had just forgotten that even with a general downward trend, it's possible to have a positive number.
False negatives of the gene NER component can cause a miss of an important argument, as demonstrated in example #3 in Table 3 in which BANNER could not detect G691S (RET Exon 11 polymorphism).
Similar(51)
However, there is a missing of market in the real world for natural goods.
One reason for this variance among others is a missing of a uniform definition of continence in different publications.
It is also useful for quickly logging out of a computer with a missing of damaged mouse.
Aug NFP is up 170,000, which is a HUGE miss of 220,000 expected by leading economorons.
All results support the assumption of a miss-allocation of students to lower secondary school tracks.
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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