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The phrase "assumed wide" is not correct and does not convey a clear meaning in written English.
It may be intended to describe a broad assumption, but the phrasing is awkward and unclear.
Example: "The research assumed wide acceptance of the new policy, but this was not the case."
Alternatives: "broadly assumed" or "widely accepted".
Exact(3)
Whereas the earlier Saxon witan, or king's council, dealt only with great affairs of state, the new Norman court assumed wide judicial powers.
The Corps has traditionally assumed wide authority over wetlands, even if they are distant from lakes or rivers.
He said he wanted to quit last month but stayed on to help Mursi tackle a crisis that blew up when the Islamist leader assumed wide powers.
Similar(57)
Brooklyn Jewish food, of course, has assumed wider symbolic importance as well.
In our earlier work [15, 18], by assuming wide sense stationary (WSS), we exploited the Toeplitz structure of the covariance matrix.
end{aligned} (107) We further assuming wide-sense-stationary, so the remaining two-point correlation functions depend only on the time difference, and therefore reduce to auto-correlation functions.
The male instructor assumed a "wide" and "dominant" posture -- sitting up straight, legs apart, taking up a lot of physical space -- in all videos, but other factors varied: His facial expression was either smiling or unsmiling, and he either made a sexist remark or did not.
To allow for inherent variability between hospitals, and to ensure a conservative overcosting of EN, we inflated these costs by 50% and assumed a wide standard deviation (SD), in keeping with the SD of other reported medical costs (see Table 1) used in this simulation.
It must be noted that, during the last three decades, sensitization has assumed a wider meaning than habituation.
The concept of resilience has been used for more than a decade in ever-widening intervention fields and it has assumed ever-wider meanings that have made its applications and measurements uncertain and ambiguous.
Regional urban land demands are based on: 1) recent Europop 2010 population projections [35]; 2) an assumed Europe-wide convergence of average household sizes on the very long run (i.e., to 1.8 in all regions by 2100, so that in most regions a limited decrease in household size is modelled by 2030); and 3) extrapolated historical trends of regional urban land consumption per household.
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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