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The phrase "alter instructions" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when referring to the act of changing or modifying given instructions.
Example: "After reviewing the feedback, we decided to alter the instructions for the project to ensure clarity."
Alternatives: "modify instructions" or "revise instructions".
Exact(1)
Pressure, however, could be exercised by the magistrate on a defendant who refused to accept instructions that the magistrate had approved, just as a plaintiff could be forced to alter instructions that the magistrate had disapproved, by the magistrate's refusal to otherwise give the order to the judex to decide the case.
Similar(59)
But you can alter these instructions by turning the thermostat up and down.
Any changes to the DNA in the genome can alter the instructions that are given to cells, which can lead to cancer and other diseases.
You can alter the instructions (on your own) to make a CBG the way you want.
This essay investigates how teachers and Writing Program Administrators (WPAs) can use commons-based peer-to-peer technologies to change their roles, to alter writing instruction and literacy genres, and to transform our processes of learning, writing, and collaborating.
In addition to this, the teachers also reported having difficulty with using the information from the CATs to alter their instruction in the next lessons to meet the current needs of their students.
The effects of this mosaicism are unknown, although by altering the instructions in brain cells, it is suspected to influence both the normal and diseased brain.
The risk is now so common, Judge Joseph W. Bellacosa wrote for the court, that trial judges should alter their standard instructions to juries, "differentiating between ordinary and professional opinions of jurors, and directing that jurors may not use their professional expertise to insert facts and evidence outside the record with respect to material issues into the deliberative process".
Turing gave quite possibly the earliest public lecture (London, 1947) to mention computer intelligence, saying, "What we want is a machine that can learn from experience," and that the "possibility of letting the machine alter its own instructions provides the mechanism for this".
(In London in 1947, in the course of what was, so far as is known, the earliest public lecture to mention computer intelligence, Turing said, 'What we want is a machine that can learn from experience', adding that the 'possibility of letting the machine alter its own instructions provides the mechanism for this' (Turing [1947] p. 393).
Many prospective developers of distance-learning courses make the mistake of starting with this step and then twisting, molding, and altering the instruction to fit the medium.
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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