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Discover LudwigThe phrase "accessible anchor" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts related to web design, navigation, or any situation where a point of reference needs to be easily reachable or understandable.
Example: "To improve user experience, we need to ensure that every section of the website has an accessible anchor for easy navigation."
Alternatives: "easy-to-reach reference" or "user-friendly anchor point".
Exact(3)
"But if you're an accessible anchor, then it's not.
But like Remain's, it is yawn-some and hard to drive home--for lack of a clear accessible anchor on which it can be hung and while it is unclear what precisely his policies will actually be.
Two of the mRNAs, including the ATPase subunit 6 and ND7-550 (5' end of NADH dehydrogenase subunit 7) that have open, accessible anchor binding sites show very efficient gRNA targeting.
Similar(57)
We argue that because both anchored and drifting FADs alter the natural environment, the more easily accessible anchored FADs can be used to test the ecological trap hypothesis.
There may be a place to get a latte there but there is no Third Place, those accessible anchors of community life like bars, farmer's markets or barber shops that help foster civic engagement and interaction with both regulars and new faces.
The older buildings, all accessible from here, anchor three corners of the atrium.
Cellular CD55 is attached to the plasma membrane by a GPI anchor, accessible to cleavage by phospholipase C [ 26].
But on the N.B.A. spectrum, where Cuban anchors one extreme (engaged, outspoken, accessible) and Denver's Stan Kroenke anchors the other (reclusive, distant), Prokhorov figures to be somewhere in the middle, but leaning toward Cuban.
The pre-coated glass slides (Fig. 2a, stage 1) with accessible NH2 groups for AuNP anchoring were subsequently immersed by one side in an aqueous solution of the AuNP (the solution should keep its color during this process).
In a video accessible here, Elmo joined Weather Channel anchor Stephanie Abrams to talk about what hurricanes are — "a very strong storm with lots and lots of rain and wind," and why they can feel so stressful and scary.
The enormous range of his reading and conversation provided a wealth of accessible examples, often humorous or earthy, to anchor difficult philosophical points.
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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