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Discover LudwigThe phrase "all incidences" is not correct in standard English; the correct term is "all incidents." You can use "all incidents" when referring to every occurrence or event, particularly in contexts involving reports, statistics, or discussions about events.
Example: "The report detailed all incidents of workplace harassment over the past year."
Alternatives: "all occurrences" or "all events."
Exact(34)
However, studies elsewhere (McWhirter and Bacon, 1980; Muirhead, 1995; Petridou et al, 1997; Li et al, 1998; Hjalmars and Gustafsson, 1999; Adelman et al, 2005) have found higher ALL incidences in urban or high-density regions.
Cancer registry data on childhood ALL incidences at ages 0 4 years in 1992 1998 were obtained from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program of the National Cancer Institute.
The vaccine is 85 to 95percentt effective against the four most common bacterial causes of the disease, which comprise about 75percentt of all incidences of the disease in college students, Dr. Turner said.
In all incidences, it goes without saying that your day bag should be locked in a nearby filing cabinet and swapped for a thin clutch, which should be artfully held at the side of your body (for the first 10 minutes), shoved under your arm (for the next 10) before abandoning on a table for the rest of the night.
The world of e-readers experienced one of its most preposterous controversies this week, when a blogger named Philip Howard noticed that Barnes and Noble's budget electronic edition of Tolstoy's "War and Peace" had searched for and replaced all incidences of the word "kindled" (a variant of the name of Amazon's e-reader, of course, but also a legitimate English word) with the word "Nookd".
A third of all incidences of breast cancer occur in women aged over 70.
Similar(26)
Further studies of the factors contributing to racial differences in ALL incidence and mortality are needed.
Population in 1990 and proportional population change were not statistically significantly associated with childhood ALL incidence.
It must also be noted in our study that just as there is no rural urban gradient in ALL incidence among girls, there is likewise no gender disparity in ALL incidence in the most rural areas.
In particular, ALL incidence shows a typical peak at age 2 years for girls and 3 for boys.
However, the curvilinear relationships between residential relocation variables and childhood ALL incidence have not been reported previously.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com