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The phrase "appears to permit" is correct and usable in written English
It can be used when discussing something that seems to allow or give permission for a particular action or situation. Example: "The new policy appears to permit employees to work from home more frequently than before."
Exact(14)
Local recharge of stormwater into the trenches appears to permit minor releases, perhaps due to transient saturation within the trenches but above the local water table.
Where such circumstances do exist, the I.N.S. policy appears to permit other persons, besides a parent, to speak for the child in immigration matters.
The only discovery rights Oregon appears to permit are the rights to view written statements made by state witnesses and by the defendant, in the hands of the police.
We do not sustain, however, the student referendum mechanism of the Universitys program, which appears to permit the exaction of fees in violation of the viewpoint neutrality principle.
In addition, the law appears to permit Ms. Warren to run the bureau's day-to-day affairs while it is nominally under the supervision of the Treasury Department, to which Congress has delegated the powers of the bureau until it is fully established as a freestanding agency.
To lend assistance to one of these cannot be considered an interference in the constitution of the other state (for it is then in a state of anarchy)." Since the present conflict features two entities Mr Assad's regime and the anti-government rebels wrangling over rival visions of Syria's future, Kant's principle appears to permit intervention.
Similar(46)
A Senate version would more clearly appear to permit double regulation.
We have a situation where the policies, on the face of it, appear to permit lawyers to be involved in practices that are unlawful and unethical".
Two or three times a week he goes to the gym, which helps to explain why he looks far healthier than this lifestyle would appear to permit.
The deputy director of the National Security Agency on Friday sounded skeptical about permitting the FBI, DEA or other law enforcement agencies to directly search through the NSA's vast data troves, as a new bill would appear to permit.
The deputy director of the National Security Agency on Friday sounded sceptical about permitting the FBI, DEA or other law enforcement agencies to directly search through the NSA's vast data troves, as a new bill would appear to permit, writes Spencer Ackerman in Philadelphia.
More suggestions(17)
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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