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Discover LudwigThe phrase "academic remarks" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to comments or observations made in an academic context, such as in a paper, lecture, or discussion.
Example: "The professor's academic remarks on the subject provided valuable insights for the students."
Alternatives: "scholarly comments" or "educational observations".
Exact(1)
An academic remarks with bafflement that a candidate has "got his violin grades on there".
Similar(59)
Addressing a rally the night before the demonstration, Cornel West, the writer and academic, remarked that he "did not come here to give speeches".
When the Association of Accounting Technicians earlier this year published a list of the best-paid players in rugby union, one academic remarked that the sport largely remained rooted in its colonial past, lacking the broad appeal of football.
Other than scholars of Aristotle, few academics remark how early the paradigm of philosophical book-writing was established.
This academic's remarks inadvertently demonstrate why Scotland's built heritage is of great social value to its people.
However, academic Joseph Tabbi remarked in a 2008 paper that Agrippa was among those works that are "canonized before they have been read, resisted, and reconsidered among fellow authors within an institutional environment that persists in time and finds outlets in many media".
Pressure had been growing on ministers to sack the conservative academic for the remarks he reportedly made in an interview with the New Statesman magazine which was published yesterday morning.
If anyone's counting on the stupidity of the American voters, it's the ACA's opponents, who have turned an academic's dumb remarks before some open mikes into a much dumber controversy. .
She is not accused of "insulting Turkishness" because of her campaigning journalism or her academic work, but for remarks made by a fictional character in her latest novel, The Bastard of Istanbul.
A profile of Mr Miliband's father in the right-wing tabloid described Miliband senior as "the man who hated Britain" on the basis of remarks the academic made about the nationalism of the English when he was 17 and his well-known hard-left socialism and criticism of the establishment.
At this time, decades of research had already concluded that profit sharing raised productivity so Kennedy was reflecting that academic finding in his remarks.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com