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Discover LudwigThe phrase "arguably fair" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when expressing that something can be considered fair, though there may be differing opinions on the matter.
Example: "The decision to grant the extension was arguably fair, given the circumstances surrounding the project delays."
Alternatives: "possibly fair" or "potentially fair".
Exact(10)
In a note on the bid, Ingenious Securities described 225p as "a full and arguably fair final offer".
Blair-Robinson, who has written a book entitled 2010: A Blueprint for Change: Bold Ideas for Voters, said he had taken legal advice and sought the opinion of the Ministry of Justice and had been informed by the department that while it "would not necessarily agree with the conclusions" he draws, his "interpretation of the constitution is basically sound" and his analysis "arguably, fair".
Whatever his next steps in national politics, it's arguably fair to say that along with a series of high-rise buildings and some Olympics-linked structures, the bike lanes will be the most tangible signs of Johnson's time running Britain's capital.
Q: The topic you've researched is one that, it's arguably fair to say, is somewhat obscure.
If some (arguably fair weather) friends abandon you because you don't update your Facebook.
Restrained by federal antitrust regulations and NOAA guidelines, Adam Smith's invisible hand thus promotes wide dissemination at an arguably fair price.
Similar(50)
The possibility to use computers for counting ballots allows us to design new voting schemes that are arguably fairer than existing schemes designed for hand-counting.
Amid this veritable mass of testosterone, one woman has stood tall, golden lasso in hand, as a bona fide beacon of hope for the arguably fairer but never lesser sex: Wonder Woman.
In such an arguably fairer system, every primary transplant candidate has an increased chance of receiving a graft, and except for differences in medical need, no primary transplant patient would see a life-prolonging intervention be given instead to someone who had had such an intervention already.
But what about people in states that do not have such a law, or arguably, a fair process?
The interface can be clunky and frustrating at times, and the required acts are repetitive, which is arguably a fair simulation of reality.
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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