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The phrase "assuming it would make" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when you want to express a condition or hypothesis regarding the potential outcome or effect of an action.
Example: "I decided to proceed with the plan, assuming it would make a positive impact on our results."
Alternatives: "presuming it would create" or "considering it might lead to".
Exact(1)
Rivers, who earned his 700th win, acknowledged before the game that his team entered the season assuming it would make the playoffs.
Similar(59)
When Apple's digital personal assistant launched with the iPhone 4S, many assumed it would make its way to new (and faster) iPad as well.
When she did not disclose the findings then, the I.R.S. assumed it would make them public when its acting commissioner, Steven Miller, testified on Capitol Hill, and the Treasury official said the department again deferred.
But ministers have been silent about how large the cuts might need to be in non-protected departments, or on what level of debt interest payments the Treasury assumed it would have to make.
And because it's hard to predict, I just put in how much I made in 2013, assuming it would be about the same.
Apparently basing your entire society on the price of a single commodity and assuming that it would make bank forever is a really bad idea!
It evaporated easily; if it was sprayed on a battlefield, a commander could not assume that it would make that area impenetrable to the enemy for an extended period of time.
When I saw that the president's economic report devoted a whole chapter to health care, I assumed that it would make some attempt to address these public concerns.
Rape culture and the exploitation of women is so deeply embedded in the media and in our psyches that executives who produced and vetted this song obviously also did not see an issue, and assumed it would just be another hit to make money from.
That would require many more advisers than the alliance is likely to muster and would entail more risk than most nations seem prepared to assume, though some American experts believe it would make the Afghan military more effective.
When I first proposed this column as a monthly glimpse at the doctoral experience, I assumed the idea was so original it would make my editor's eyeballs extend out of their sockets on stalks.
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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