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The phrase "account derived from" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing the source or origin of information or data that has been gathered or calculated.
Example: "The financial report includes an account derived from the latest sales figures and market analysis."
Alternatives: "report based on" or "information sourced from".
Exact(3)
Nigerian theatre deals with three types of themes: the fantastic folktale, the farcical social satire, and the historical or mythological account derived from oral tradition.
In an account derived from official government sources, he wrote that after the Baath Party members who dominated Iraq's governing council were ousted by an army coup late in 1963, in the cellar of one building "were found all sorts of loathsome instruments of torture, including electric wires with pincers," and "small heaps of bloodied clothing were scattered about".
Whether or not values from the health declaration and the medical examination were considered abnormal was based on generally accepted reference values taking age and gender into account, derived from WHO guidelines, GP guidelines and laboratory textbooks (see Table 1).
Similar(57)
Central to both Mill's account of human reason and also to his social projects is his account, deriving from Bentham and his father, of the science of the human mind.
The film is preceded by "StoryCorps: A Selection of Short Films," animated accounts derived from segments on NPR's "Morning Edition," in which Americans share stories from their past.
This account derived as much from conceptual art of the 1960's as it did from Mr. Shore's personal artistic concerns.
It contains a long, detailed account of the events preceding the Schism, an account partially derived from a work of Cardinal Peter Flandrin.
Much of Repcheck's account derives from scattered cathedral correspondence, including Copernicus's own, long-known letters.
Here the pragmatic interest of the historian's account derives from the antecedent unlikelihood of the event in question: how was this outcome possible?
Another fundamental difficulty with the unificationist account derives from its reliance on what might be called a "winner take all" conception of unification.
This is an unapologetically orthodox account, largely derived from the standard sources and without the benefit of some of the latest scholarship.
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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