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The phrase "a tiny deviation" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe a small or minor difference from a standard, expectation, or norm.
Example: "The experiment showed a tiny deviation from the expected results, which prompted further investigation."
Alternatives: "a slight variation" or "a minor discrepancy."
Exact(3)
Even a tiny deviation from the customer's specifications can lead to costly wear and tear.
If there's even a tiny deviation from the r-squared law, the minimum bounce height should be different than expected.
This is due to the fact that, in the experimental setup, the alignment of the plane of Phantom 2 has had a tiny deviation from a angle to the incident THz beam. Figure 3 Left to right, in radians: phase of acquired complex phantom image, phase image generated using the circle fitting data and knowledge of phantom geometry, and difference image.
Similar(57)
With the factual piece, the misdirection was obvious the entire piece was about a broader trend, with one tiny deviation.
With the factual piece, the misdirection was obvious — the entire piece was about a broader trend, with one tiny deviation.
He'd won a labor victory, but his prize was a factory full of sullen, angry workers determined to file grievances on every tiny deviation from the contract he had made them sign.
Since these Te precipitates are strong Raman scatterers, they can reflect very tiny deviation of the stoichiometry (below the composition resolution of RBS).
What's more, Hennig found that these tiny deviations from a steady beat aren't random; they follow repeated, statistical patterns.
Are they?" He was worried that tiny deviations in tuning would jar his keen perception of pitch.
In essence, the fund placed bets that tiny deviations in the traditional relationships between the prices of various securities would eventually return to normal.
Drell recognized as early as the 1950s that such tests could reveal tiny deviations from the theory, potentially hinting at new fundamental physics.
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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