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The phrase "an answer based on" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when you want to indicate that a response or solution is derived from specific information or criteria.
Example: "I will provide an answer based on the data we collected during the survey."
Alternatives: "a response derived from" or "a solution informed by".
Exact(12)
With e-mail, it's too easy to fire back an answer based on one-dimensional data and assume you've done your duty.
And it will give you an answer based on that, plus your risk factors.
It proposed an answer based on the concept of a "good life" rather than a "better life".
But a study published recently in the Royal Society's Biology Letters may have found an answer based on a different kind of fossil: fossilized lice.
One reason for this may be that answering these types of questions requires a repertoire of relational responding in which the individual must select an answer based on the class memberships of stimuli found in the question.
For anyone who's ever Googled "what happens when you take [prescription drug] with [other prescription drug]," idodrugs.club is a hack that gives you an answer based on scientific research.
Similar(46)
Four multiple-choice options were created for each dialog: one correct answer, one incorrect answer containing words/phrases from the last turn of the dialog (type A), one incorrect answer based on the meaning of the entire dialog (type B), and one incorrect answer with the opposite interpretation (type C).
The ICBM comprises 22 items, each of which presents a clinical scenario to which responses represent either a 'correct' answer based on a statistical rationale or a 'bias prone' response [ 13].
The ICBM consists of 22 clinical scenarios, each of which is followed by a question with forced choice responses with either two or three alternatives, one of which represents a 'correct' answer based on a statistical rationale, while other alternatives represent 'bias prone' responses [ 13].
We have a partial answer, based on information seeded by White House minions in the fecund soil of the complicit media.
A preliminary answer, based on the initial fallout of the revelations, published, last Thursday, by the glossy magazine Closer, is both yes and no.
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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