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Discover LudwigThe phrase "and often based on" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to indicate that something is frequently derived from or influenced by another source or idea.
Example: "The conclusions drawn in the report are often based on extensive research and data analysis."
Alternatives: "and frequently derived from" or "and commonly influenced by".
Exact(27)
Efficient distribution of bracing over a structure is an important concern and often based on intuition and previous experience.
His work, characterized by emphasis on plotting and dialogue and often based on literary adaptations, frequently attacked or ridiculed social institutions and made provocative jabs at bourgeois society.
Characterized by rhythmic power and often based on the eight-tone flamenco scale, Surinach's compositions those for the concert stage as well as those for ballet were much in demand.
Now that you have written a frank and informative article about the reality that teenage sex happens early and often, based on data gained from three federally financed studies ("1 in 5 Teenagers Has Sex Before 15, Study Finds," news article, May 20), we can probably count the days before financing for such studies will be permanently curtailed.
Despite significant advances in recent years in the application of sensing and imaging technologies to the study of the hydraulic behaviour of soils, our understanding of how solutes and particulate matter move through soil is still limited and often based on idealised soil structures.
This use of equipment is sport specific and often based on experience.
Similar(33)
Studies on work and stress are often based on one of two stress models.
Mr. Fox makes both figurative and abstract drawings and prints, often based on the human body.
However, recommendations exist and are often based on consensus and not on evidence.
However, direct comparisons between doctors' and nurses' views are scarce and are often based on small sample sizes.
And these words are nouns and are often based on verbs ending in -s-s, like discussion from discuss.
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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