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The phrase "a possible inference" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing a conclusion or deduction that may be drawn from available information or evidence.
Example: "Based on the data presented, a possible inference is that the new marketing strategy has led to increased sales."
Alternatives: "a potential conclusion" or "a likely deduction."
Exact(7)
A possible inference is that faith and doubt can be equally blind.
In the present case, however, Justice Eady felt that the fact that the article was published online, and continues to be available online, "gives rise at least to a possible inference that there has been a continuing, albeit modest, readership" and so could possibly sustain an argument that Mardas' reputation was more than minimally damaged.
He tended to consider a given state of the universe as being a given set of premisses, so to say, of a possible inference.
Notaro (2014) refers to a possible inference drawn by the L'Aquila Judge that the CGR scientists should probably have communicated, rather than the absence of risk, the impossibility of either affirming or ruling out any risk to L'Aquila and its citizens at the time.
A possible inference from this observation is that algal genomes have become very stable and that intron evolution now is very much slowed.
A possible inference is that PKA activation is able to simulate PKC and p38 MAPK, leading to IKK-dependent NF- κB activation.
Similar(53)
Said Jerome Cohen, arguably the world's leading expert on the Chinese legal system, "What makes it so sensational is the combination of a highly publicized major commercial negotiation that has failed with the immediate arrest of a principal figure, raising the possible inference of retaliation".
The present study revealed the application of likelihood ratio for a possible sex inference especially in cases where knowing the sex is considered to be one of the information needed to identify a suspecting forensic case.
The assumption here is that history-dependent behavior is a manifestation of memory, and that the better the possible inference about prior conditions from current measurements, the more memory there is within the system.
However, whenever possible, inference should relate to the United States as a whole.
That's not a settled point among historians, but "Spies" is always drawn to the strongest possible inference.
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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