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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a root reference" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts related to programming, databases, or any field where a foundational or primary reference point is needed.
Example: "In our database schema, a root reference is essential for establishing relationships between tables."
Alternatives: "a primary reference" or "a base reference".
Exact(1)
The relatively recent origins of the western term should not obscure the fact that there had long before developed, among East Asian intellectuals, an understanding of Confucianism expressed not through a root reference to the founder Confucius, but instead to those who followed his teachings, the Ju, or scholars.
Similar(59)
RNA extracts from root samples from seven development stages of North American ginseng were subjected to 454 sequencing, filtered for quality and used in the de novo assembly of a collective root reference transcriptome consisting of 41,623 transcripts.
Having generated a C. hybridum root reference transcriptome, our next goal was to perform comparative gene expression profiles in orchid roots inoculated with different beneficial fungi.
Clients would ask for darker roots to be painted in, a look she called "recession roots", a reference to those who could no longer afford regular highlights.
We have also compared the frequency vector of the given sequence to that of the reference vector using a root mean square (RMS) measure.
Each eligible patient will be classified by the assessing physiotherapist as having LBP with referred leg pain or having LBP with nerve root pain ("reference standard" is the clinician's diagnosis).
It's an anchor, a point of reference, a way of rooting ourselves within a record.
The organ specific expression of each IiDIR gene was normalized to actin as control and compared with root as reference using 2-△△Ct method.
Transcript abundance of each IiDIR gene was normalized to actin as control and compared with root as reference using 2-△△Ct method.
The observation that the MCI test results showed the same trend at a higher "reference" or "root" tone suggests that MCI is not merely a more complex form of pitch ranking involving sequential tones but is also a more difficult form.
Fourth and finally, Quine seems in Roots of Reference (1974) to have provided an explication for 'analytic' that meets his demand for empirical/behavioral criteria without inducing either the drastic failure or the circularity envisioned above.
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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