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The phrase "at a possibility" is not correct and does not convey a clear meaning in written English.
It is unclear when it could be used, as it does not fit standard English usage.
Example: "We are looking at a possibility of rain tomorrow" would be more appropriate without the phrase "at a possibility."
Alternatives: "considering a possibility" or "looking into a possibility."
Exact(9)
He hinted at a possibility, which he has raised in the past, that he would call Judge Stearns and Mr. Mueller as witnesses.
But a few casual expressions of physical affection for Sonya hint heartbreakingly at a possibility that will be foreclosed by his growing fixation on Yelena.
His essay "Shiny Balls of Mud," a brief, evocative masterpiece that originally ran in Tate Magazine in 2002, and is collected in "Distrust that Particular Flavor," from 2012, hints at a possibility.
Each new Sutherland exhibition hints at a possibility of re-evaluation and reassessment; perhaps the latest, at the Dulwich Picture Gallery this month, will speed his long overdue return to the pantheon.
On Monday they swooned after a poll released over the weekend showed the incumbent consolidating her lead and hinted at a possibility of an outright victory in the first round.
The results of the work point at a possibility to simplify the annealing technology by replacing the two-step annealing with one-step in the oxygen-containing environment while maintaining the positive effects.
Similar(50)
We're looking at that as a possibility.
This is at least a possibility.
Then didn't self-defense remain at least a possibility?
All the same, there is at least a possibility, however slim, that Roberts will surprise.
Minsky feels that there is at least a possibility that this might not be true.
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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