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Discover LudwigThe phrase "due meaning" is correct and commonly used in written English.
It refers to the intended or expected meaning of a particular word, phrase, or sentence. Example: The speaker's words were distorted, making it difficult for the audience to understand the due meaning of her message.
Exact(2)
The clouds that dogged the hump-backed hills are gone and a new moon is due, meaning natural light will be at a minimum.
The study found that the share of people with debt past due, meaning they are at least 30 days late with payment on a non-mortgage debt, was much smaller: 1 in 20 people.
Similar(58)
As is now obligatory, Veronica Roth's source novel has been split into two movies (the second part, Ascendant, is due next year) meaning that this treads a lot of water, separating Tris and Four (Theo James), removing the agency of the former, leaving the latter to do the heroic lifting work.
Unlike stocks and bonds, trading in distressed assets requires much more due diligence, meaning it isn't well suited to retail investors, said Oliver Rui, a professor of finance at the China Europe International Business School in Shanghai.
But he also noted that the draft bill will be debated in the House of Commons in due course — meaning there's at least a possibility that Uber's decision to conceal a massive data breach for so long could end up helping to bolster consumers protections in UK data protection law.
The main points Feyerabend emphasized by calling scientific theories incommensurable had been developed already by Duhem, who had argued that logic is insufficient for determining the outcome of theoretical disputes in the natural sciences, and who documented the difficulties historians have in understanding the development of the natural sciences due to meaning change.
There are two further industrial action ballots at Enfield, Greater London and Gateshead Metro, Newcastle due today, meaning that staff at all six restaurants will likely be on strike from Friday the 1st of June.
This kind of problem also arose for other words, but survey questions in other domains, beyond acculturation and physical activity, could well present even more translation problems due to meaning and variation in pronunciation.
Consistent with Adam and Galinsky (2012) and Frank and Gilovich (1988), in Gino et al. the effect of dress on one's own behavior was due to the meaning of the dress cue in a context relevant to the meaning of that dress cue.
A usufructuary writes: I can't stand the word fimicolous myself, though that may be partly due to its meaning.
Maybe the loan and any interest due is "offset," meaning it's deducted from his share of the estate.
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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