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"a question of definition" is a grammatically correct and widely used phrase in written English.
It is typically used to indicate that a particular issue or topic is one that is subject to varying interpretations or definitions. For example: - The debate about whether video games should be considered a sport is ultimately a question of definition. Some argue that the physical and mental skills required make it a sport, while others argue that it lacks the traditional elements of a sport. - The legal case revolved around a question of definition: whether the company's actions could be classified as fraud or simply a breach of contract. - The concept of beauty is a question of definition that has puzzled philosophers for centuries.
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It's a question of definition.
That's a question of definition" -- and just her latest adventure in drawing.
As is often the case, it is partly a question of definition.
5) Their final point, that human-caused global warming is not a crisis, reprises Point 2. Again, this is largely a question of definition and values, not science.
The scientific disagreement over coexistence is also partly a question of definition: the biotech industry and new regulations proposed by the European Union would permit some degree of inadvertent intermixing.
This is merely a question of definition, and I refer to any change in benefit rates relative to wages as a policy change even if prior law would have it that way.
Similar(54)
That's not a question of definitions, it's a question of your model of the economy.
The difference between the figures essentially boils down to a question of definitions: Who gave what money, and how should it be classified?
This will be a question of basic definitions for the Poles: is it a Patriot battery if it doesn't have live missiles?
This poses a major question of definition of treatment response and remission, and also measurement of depressive symptoms, e.g. using scales originally designed for the follow-up of depressed in-patients [ 34].
The Medicare cut is a question of what the definition of the word "cut" is: Democrats call it a flat-out cut, while Republicans, more accurately, call it a cut in the rate of growth in Medicare spending.
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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