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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a projection made" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts where you are discussing a forecast, estimate, or representation of future events or data.
Example: "The report includes a projection made by the analysts regarding the company's growth over the next five years."
Alternatives: "an estimate created" or "a forecast generated."
Exact(6)
Such increased incentives have propelled October sales to the third-highest monthly pace since 1980, according to a projection made today by G.M. Profits?
Friends of the Earth say that even the aspirational 27% improvement in efficiency by 2030 will be based on a projection made in 2007 before the economic crisis, when expected growth rates – and thus energy consumption – were far higher.
Mr. Snow said the surplus figure was only a projection made before the economy slowed because of the recession, stock market collapse, corporate scandals and Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the newspaper said.
Gartner, a research firm, recently raised its forecast for the growth in global information technology spending in 2011 to 7.1 percent, up from 5.6 percent, a projection made a few months earlier.
In theorizing religion, both adopt a projection theory, classically rooted in Feuerbach's claim that "theology is anthropology" and "God" a projection made in the image of "man".
The holograms of disabled people appear as ghost-like apparitions through a projection made out of an invisible screen of air saturated with water.
Similar(54)
The World Bank cut its forecast for the region to 7.2 percent this year, from a previous projection, made in May, of 7.6 percent.
An alarmingly sharp decline in state tax revenues could further undermine the finances of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, according to a new projection made public on Monday.
New analysis of satellite data, reported today in Science, shows that deforestation on the island is hurtling on faster even than a pessimistic projection made by the World Bank 2 years ago.
Correction: September 30, 2000, Saturday An article in Business Day yesterday about plans by Bristol-Myers Squibb to sell some businesses and focus on prescription drugs referred incorrectly to an earnings projection made by Charles A. Heimbold Jr., the company's chairman, at a meeting with securities analysts and investors.
This body-landscape is also an image of itself, a mass-media projection made up of Hollywood movies and pornography and news footage of the Vietnam war.
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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