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The phrase "a tangible embodiment of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that represents or manifests an idea, concept, or quality in a physical form.
Example: "The sculpture stands as a tangible embodiment of the artist's vision and creativity."
Alternatives: "a physical representation of" or "a concrete manifestation of".
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The court first concluded that the district court erred to the extent that it determined ineligibility of claim 1 of the '615 patent solely on the basis that it is not directed to a tangible embodiment.
Firstly, AI doesn't necessarily need a tangible embodiment.
This is the kind of painted miracle that so many artists would aim for in the centuries to come: nothing less than the tangible embodiment of human nature.
Tours must be booked in advance by calling Mon-Fri 9am-1pm, 2pm-6pm Along with the Maxxi and Macro, the Auditorium is the tangible embodiment of Rome's recent cultural renaissance.
It's a time for solipsism, for staring tirelessly at our own psyches and saying "what is that?" For millennials, AIM was the tangible embodiment of that coming-of-age phrase, and for that purpose, it was everything it needed to be ― and it also needed, eventually, to come to its end.
"So many have cleaved to their libraries with so fond an affection," Porter writes, "and have learned to conceive of them as parts of themselves, as in a sense visible and tangible embodiments of their own being".
The next time someone asks me what advantage poetry holds over prose, I will point to these lines, which move beyond the description of pain to its tangible embodiment.
4 Patry §13:44.10, at 13 129 ("There is no connection, linguistically or substantively, between Section[s] 104 and 109: Section 104 deals with national eligibility for the intangible work of authorship; Section 109(a) deals with the tangible, physical embodiment of the work, the 'copy.'copy
Instead of applying the Alice test, it concluded that claim 1 of the '615 patent fails as it is not directed to any tangible embodiment.
But essentially he's an emblem, an ideal, an embodiment of imperturbability, of holy silence.
The Copyright Act defines a work as "fixed" in a tangible medium of expression when "its embodiment in a copy... by or under the authority of the author, is sufficiently permanent... to permit it to be... reproduced". 17 U.S.C. § 101.
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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