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Discover LudwigThe phrase "assumes for example" is not correct in standard written English.
It can be used when introducing a hypothetical situation or scenario to illustrate a point, but it needs to be rephrased for clarity.
Example: "The theory assumes, for example, that all participants have equal access to resources."
Alternatives: "takes for instance" or "presumes, for example."
Exact(6)
The plan assumes, for example, that payments made by Medicare to doctors will be cut by nearly 25% in 2011.
Our back-of-envelope calculation assumes, for example, that young singles spend more on eating out, communication and transport.
It assumes, for example, that federal spending on infrastructure will jump, that the cost of fighting fires will be less than half of what it was this year, and that the state will be able to sell $5 billion in bonds by July.The plan anyway faces crippling opposition in the state Capitol.
The U.S. EPA assumes, for example, that cancer risk is proportional to lifetime dose.
Both those studies adopted a polytomous Rasch model (e.g., [ 42, 55]), which assumes, for example, that all the items in a scale have the same discrimination power.
In a model that assumes, for example, a Bernoulli distribution of the sequence reads at a heterozygous position, the Phred score of a heterozygous genotype would decrease the more the ratio of reads supporting the alternate allele deviates from the expected value of 0.5.
Similar(54)
Assume, for example, that you reversed the current buzz codes.
One cannot assume, for example, that higher tax rates always result in higher tax revenues.
It had long been assumed, for example, that aerobic power doesn't vary greatly in adults.
The tests always assume, for example, that terrorists want to take over the control room of a plant.
You assume, for example, that the Ossies were thrilled to get to the West, but many were at best ambivalent.
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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