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The phrase "advertisements that could" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing potential or hypothetical advertisements that have the ability to do something or achieve a certain effect.
Example: "The marketing team is brainstorming advertisements that could attract a younger audience."
Alternatives: "ads that might" or "commercials that are capable of".
Exact(10)
They suggested that if students can provide documentation of questionable advertisements, that could qualify as an institution "knowingly" providing misleading information.
It imposed restrictions on the types of broadcast, cable and satellite advertisements that could appear within 30 days of a federal primary or within 60 days of a federal general election.
Advertisements that could incite children to strange behavior -- one regulator said that an ad for Tango, a British soft drink, would provoke children to slap each other around the ears -- are also taboo.
The wall would no doubt create an appalling floodlight of announcements and advertisements that could only further degrade the neighborhood: an immense, flashing electronic billboard would be the first thing many visitors to the city see if Amtrak ever moves, as intended, to the James Farley Post Office building across the avenue.
In a nonjury trial in January, Justice Beeler convicted Mr. Hirschfeld, 80, on eight counts of contempt, finding that he had violated a rule of silence by running newspaper advertisements that could have influenced jurors during his trial on charges of trying to have his business partner killed.
The health experts call for a ban on advertisements that could encourage children and non-smokers to use the devices.
Similar(50)
For example, in contrast to Fig. 1, Fig. 3 shows an advertisement that could be an evidence of human trafficking.
In a radio advertisement that could cost him his ability to teach concealed handgun safety classes, Keller made it clear that an Oct. 26 course at Keller's Riverside Store in Mason wouldn't be open to people who voted for President Obama and Muslims.
Then newspapers could insert advertisements that people could click on, or advertisements that were tailored to knowledge about the person reading the ad.
WORDS that once would have had mouths on Madison Avenue washed out with soap are becoming common enough in advertisements that one could wonder if the familiar Wendy's slogan from 1984, were it being introduced today, might be brought out as "Where's the [choose your expletive] beef?" There are two main reasons, experts say, for the increasing frankness of the language in everyday advertising.
Placing a restriction on the advertisements that partners could run would have imposed its own enforcement costs as well.
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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