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Discover LudwigThe phrase "amalgamations in" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing the process or result of combining different elements or entities within a specific context or field.
Example: "The study focused on the amalgamations in the tech industry, highlighting how various companies merged to innovate."
Alternatives: "combinations in" or "mergers in".
Exact(2)
Following bankruptcy of Airship Industries and a series of ownership changes and amalgamations in the 1990s, the company's blimp operations passed to Global Skyship Industries.
There was clearly some community anger against amalgamations in places such as Kiama, but it's not yet clear whether this anger exists in other marginal seats, and whether it's enough to impact the federal election.
Similar(57)
In a similar manner, one may describe five more systematic modifications of a graph (each having the property that the original graph is flow equivalent to the modified graph): contraction (the inverse of expansion); out-split, as well as its inverse out-amalgamation; and in-split, as well as its inverse in-amalgamation.
Since the cities' amalgamation in 1950, the population of Tel Aviv Yafo has fluctuated; it reached a peak in the 1960s and then declined gradually until the 1980s.
I feel a bit like the more experience I have in as many different situations as I can, the amalgamation in the end will give me a more distinctive style".
The centerpiece of the realignment, to be formally announced today, is the amalgamation in the United States of many media tasks that had been handled separately at the three largest Omnicom agencies.
One of the state's largest communities, it was formed through the amalgamation in 1893 of the villages of Torquay (east bank) and Formby (west), both of which had been founded in the 1850s.
The general amalgamation in the entertainment universe (where any story seems fair game for all media) seems particularly threatening to the theater, which has long felt its relevance slipping, its stories drowned out by the ever more clamorous din of television and the movies.
But, by the beginning of the 20th century, the conviction had been growing among the Muslims that their interests demanded the preservation of their separate identity rather than amalgamation in the Indian nation that would for all practical purposes be Hindu.
Leeds has three universities: the University of Leeds (1904), Leeds Metropolitan University (founded as Leeds Polytechnic in 1970, though its origins date to 18th-century institutions; granted university status 1992), and Leeds Trinity University (granted university status in 2012, following its amalgamation in 1980 as Leeds Trinity and All Saints from two institutions founded in 1966).
In Fig. 4a, the spherical grains are closely packed, uniformly distributed and amalgamation in some regions within the scanned area.
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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