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The phrase "alignment that may" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing potential or conditional aspects of alignment in various contexts, such as business, technology, or personal goals.
Example: "The alignment that may occur between our objectives and the client's needs is crucial for project success."
Alternatives: "alignment that could" or "alignment that might".
Exact(5)
McCarty: While it is often convenient to view the current election as the end result of decades of partisan polarization, a case can be made that it has sown the seeds for new political alignment that may exhibit far less polarization than we have seen.
The "position of no return," as reported by Ireland [18], is the dynamic alignment that may easily lead to ACL injury.
Lasky's admiration suggests an ideological alignment that may have brought the two neocon cells to each others' attention.
It is electrostatic concordance between the two molecules, rather than perfect atomic alignment that may allow for the similar interaction with the muscarinic receptor.
Next, the gap spacing from the template alignment is reintroduced into the pairwise alignment yielding an alignment that may be longer than the template alignment.
Similar(55)
Toe landing improves the alignment of the leg and helps athletes avoid risky alignments that may lead to ACL injury [28].
Some existing clustering software calculates distances from multiple alignments that may be sub-optimal.
Alignments were manually edited for mis-alignments that may have accumulated due to overlapping gene fragments.
Possibly even more importantly, by respecting block boundaries, it produces alignments that may be easier to revise.
Failure to correctly assign a read to its original location may lead to spurious alignments that may be misinterpreted as editing events.
Although, GraPPLE already compared the graph-properties based and covariance based models [ 30], the study employed MUSCLE based alignments, that may artificially handicap the performance of covariance models.
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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