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Discover LudwigThe phrase "adduced to support" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to evidence or arguments that are presented to back up a claim or assertion.
Example: "The data collected from the survey was adduced to support the hypothesis that consumer behavior is changing."
Alternatives: "presented to support" or "offered to back up".
Exact(12)
1917C, 487, is adduced to support the contention.
Again, there are a few claims which appear to tell against rather than in favour of the thesis they are adduced to support.
The authors of this enjoyably sensationalist biography of Moura hint that she was complicit in the murder, though no evidence is adduced to support the view.
Its supposed masculine quality was adduced to support the claim, based on the memories of her brother Branwell's friends long after his death, that he was author or part author of it.
Indeed, some investigators even categorically deny that any experimental paradigm has been employed or any evidence can be adduced to support the claim that disownership experiences occur during the RHI.
It is significant that whatever evidence is adduced to support this and other distinctions between negation types noted here, a single negative marker is typically used for the two types (cf. Gazdar 1979), although in some languages, such as Ancient Greek (ou(k) vs. mê), two or more negative markers are distinguished on morphosyntactic grounds (Horn 1989: 447 52).
Similar(48)
I will adduce evidence to support my claim that she commissioned his commentary with the understanding that through it he would further her political project.
What kinds of motivations might be adduced to explain and endorse such resort to high theory in bioethics?
It was stated in a case in which the evidence adduced to prove probable cause was not incompetent, but was insufficient to support the inference necessary to the existence of probable cause.
Again, given the definition of knowledge above, that kind of argument is sound, because it shows that there is a logical gap between knowledge claims about the external world and the sense experiences that can be adduced as evidence to support them.
Again, given the definition of knowledge above, this kind of argument is sound, because it shows that there is a logical gap between knowledge claims about the external world and the sense experiences that can be adduced as evidence to support them.
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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