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The phrase "all the result of" is not correct in standard written English.
It is typically used to indicate that something is caused by or is a consequence of something else, but it should be phrased correctly.
Example: "The changes in the environment are all the result of human activity."
Alternatives: "entirely due to" or "completely caused by".
Exact(60)
"It was all the result of one travel trip".
This isn't all the result of gerrymandering, but it plays a substantial role.
This is basically all the result of chronic underfunding and crap, short-sighted management.
They were all the result of a rethinking of what Hammer was about.
The cost of transport is up 8%, air fares 14% and petrol 13%, all the result of higher oil prices.
As Young argued in a beleaguered Spectator blogpost, it was all the result of key facts being misrepresented.
This was all the result of an announcement that fall clothes, especially Schiaparelli, would be dripping with zippers.
But this is a very narrow view, for the facts, formulas, and theories are all the result of human underscore activity, activity of people underscore called scientists.
Suppose we have 100 different commercial varieties of wheat being grown in the United States, all the result of conventional breeding.
It was all the result of his passion to use the fortune he amassed with his company, Stafford Industries, to preserve his worst memory.
His head is swathed in bandages, a tooth is missing and he walks with a stick, all the result of a motorcycle accident.
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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