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The phrase "allowing clearance" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts where you are discussing the provision of space or freedom for movement, often in technical or procedural settings.
Example: "The new design features a mechanism allowing clearance for larger components to fit without obstruction."
Alternatives: "providing space" or "ensuring room".
Exact(4)
Eighty-five patients were immobilized despite the guideline's allowing clearance.
Thus, a shift towards higher Tb allowing clearance of PUFA from PL but maintaining high aerobic power seems to be a better option [36].
An abnormal autophagy, an innate defense mechanism allowing clearance of intracellular pathogens, could also favor AIEC persistence in the gut of IBD patients, as supported by several recent studies.
Regional anticoagulation with citrate was not performed in conjunction with the described setting, because of the necessity for increased blood flows, but regional anticoagulation protocols could possibly be developed, because a hemofilter allowing clearance of calcium-citrate complexes is included in the system, which is not the case in systems with isolated hollow-fiber gas exchangers.
Similar(56)
The body of evidence, which suggests that protective immunity allows clearance of hepatitis C virus without seroconversion is growing.
The gap between the tack strip and the baseboard allows clearance to tuck the edges of carpet down and hide any irregularities.
A gap between the panels and the internal edges of the groove allows clearance to accommodate the panels as they expand.
Bloggers have speculated that the big double garage doors will allow clearance for Mr. Palin's Piper Cub airplane and maybe his snowmobiles.
Disneyland Drive, which had separated the two theme parks at street level, was lowered by 15 feet, while the level of Disney Downtown was raised five feet, to allow clearance for cars and trucks driving beneath the pedestrian bridge.
"The fear appears to be that detainees will try to smuggle coded messages out of the camp," explains Falkoff, a fear that has often allowed clearance for English translations only - Arabic or Pashto originals being judged to represent an "enhanced security risk".
In Gilchrist v. Collector of Charleston (1808), Johnson, while holding federal circuit court, allowed clearance from the port of Charleston to a ship detained under Jefferson's Embargo Act of 1807, a measure intended to preserve U.S. neutrality in the Napoleonic Wars.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
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