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Discover LudwigThe phrase "as admissible" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts where you are discussing the acceptability or eligibility of something, often in legal or formal settings.
Example: "The evidence presented in court was deemed as admissible by the judge, allowing it to be considered during the trial."
Alternatives: "considered acceptable" or "deemed permissible."
Exact(60)
Judge Tim O'Grady of Pottawattamie County District Court became the first judge to consider brain-wave technology as admissible evidence.
Phylogenetic analyses have also been used as admissible evidence in criminal court cases involving the determination of purposeful viral transmission.
But the judge let the hate-crime charge stand, and ruled as admissible the phone recordings, in which Mr. Andrade said, "gay things need to die".
Federal investigative authorities continue to engage in wiretapping, although in 1934 Congress enacted restraints that severely limited the use of intercepted material as admissible evidence in judicial proceedings.
This is the same logic that allowed a Marine Corps corporal's buying of Anne Rice novels to be used as admissible evidence of homosexuality at the man's discharge investigation.
They had, after all, been stolen by a former agent of Spain's secret service, who leaked them to judges and journalists before the courts decided to accept them as admissible.
The Legal Aid Society filed a motion for a Frye hearing, which challenges the general scientific acceptance of new technology, to stop the introduction of the FST's conclusions as admissible evidence.
So I much prefer it when people come out and say honestly that their reasons for belief are not the kinds of reasons atheists accept as admissible, and for them to then make the case for why atheists are wrong about this.
A number of commercial enterprises, such as the US-based No Lie MRI now offer fMRI lie detection, and fMRI evidence has been submitted to courts of law in the US several times, although it has never yet been accepted as admissible evidence.
What shocked me was not that the cops offered this dubious justification, but that the Los Angeles County prosecutors had put them on the stand -- on national television, no less -- to testify to it, and that the judge accepted the officers' statements as admissible.
Suggestions such as: "Facebook as admissible evidence" and lines like: "He had some kind of criminal record, but he's a sommelier, he knows cheese" are greeted with the same editorial nod as someone's suggestion of a piece about the pizza cake, a 5,000-calorie Canadian affair.
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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