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The phrase "automatically broken" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that is broken or rendered inoperative without manual intervention, often in a technical or mechanical context.
Example: "The system will become automatically broken if the power supply is interrupted unexpectedly."
Alternatives: "instantly damaged" or "immediately inoperative".
Exact(4)
The posterior cortex was automatically broken, which meant the rear periosteum remained intact; this protects the integrity of the posterior periosteum.
Eggs were automatically broken open and macroscopic parts were separated on an industrial scale.
After the emulsion was automatically broken with the OneTouch 2 instrument, the beads carrying the single-stranded DNA templates were enriched according to the manufacturer's recommendation.
The stride cycles of individual paws were automatically broken down into swing and stance phases based on the first derivative of the paw position trajectories.
Similar(56)
Another extension to be taken in the near future is the automatic processing of complete documents, by automatically breaking sentences into fragments, and using our classifiers to annotate each fragment.
Still, that doesn't mean you should automatically break out the paint.
Aides said the president would not automatically break off contact with Sinn Fein.
Even if the U.S. tries and fails to shoot down a North Korean missile, war will not automatically break out.
A content creator can import a 3-D graphic or animation already used on the Web or in a game, and Leia's tool automatically breaks it into the 64 images necessary to generate a hologram.
Explains how they have now evolved a new-type dial telephone for the public stations, which has a clocking arrangement which automatically breaks your connection at the end of five minutes, when a phonograph voice informs you that your time is up, and waits for another nickel.
The need to get around what the industry is calling the "power wall" has touched off a frantic hunt for new computing languages, as well as new ways to automatically break up problems so they can be solved more quickly in parallel.
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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