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Discover LudwigThe phrase "arise namely" is not correct and does not work well in written English
It seems to be an attempt to introduce specific examples or details, but the combination is awkward and unclear. Example: "Several issues arise, namely the lack of communication and insufficient resources."
Exact(4)
Indeed, during cure, several defects may arise, namely resin degradation, void growth, development of residual stress, and distortion.
If the amount of template DNA is too small, DNA from a single or several lymphocytes is highly amplified, similar bands like a monoclonal rearrangement may arise, namely pseudoclonality.
With the target date for Millennium Development Goal 4, which aims to reduce child mortality by two thirds between 1990 and 2015 drawing near and many countries making insufficient progress to achieve it, critical questions arise, namely: How can momentum on maternal, newborn and child survival be recaptured and progress accelerated in the next eight years?
The data provided were limited to examination sets performed simultaneously on these three media; nevertheless, they included almost all cases of occurring fungemia and reflect specific epidemiological problems that arise, namely the high proportion of infection due to Saccharomyces cerevisiae in Center I and infection due to C. parapsilosis in Center II.
Similar(55)
And while lawmakers scrambled to get up to speed on the budget's details, confusion was already arising — namely over the amount of taxes and fees included.
You recognise that a new complication has arisen, namely that of the institutional pension managers investing in commodity indices, heavily weighted to crude oil, as an asset class.
In recent years, he and other scientists, like Christof Koch, now at the Allen Institute for Brain Science*, have made progress in understanding when consciousness arises, namely from massive complexity and linkages between different parts of the brain.
Giulio Tononi, a theorist based at the University of Wisconsin, defines consciousness simply as "what fades when we fall into dreamless sleep". In recent years, he and other scientists, like Christof Koch, now at the Allen Institute for Brain Science*, have made progress in understanding when consciousness arises, namely from massive complexity and linkages between different parts of the brain.
With more young people becoming involved in golf -- many of them black and Hispanic, who've been drawn to the game by the success of the 22-year-old professional golf star, Tiger Woods -- another problem has arisen, namely, the availability of tee times on public golf courses, most of which are already overloaded.
At this point, a question implied at the end of the previous subsection arises, namely what is effecting the unification in chaos explanations?
If he is right, then an interesting possibility arises, namely the possibility that ethics and morality are computable problems and therefore it should be possible to create an information technology that can embody moral systems of thought.
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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