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The phrase "entails something" is correct and usable in written English.
It is a verb phrase that means to require or involve something else as a consequence. For example, "This job entails working long hours".
Exact(10)
For him, victory entails something else.
entails something of a sleight of hand.
But according to Simon, "C" is a vision which entails something more than what already exists in A and B taken together.
(Premise) If a person can conceive of something, and that thing entails something else, then the person can also conceive of that other thing.
It can be shown that, together with Actual Calibration from the previous section and suitable constraints \(C(\sim)\) on the equivalence relation \(\sim\), this norm entails something stronger than Probabilism.
Note, of course, that Scotus's account of the common nature also entails something stronger than Adams is proposing: indeed, it entails precisely the sort of minimal hypostatization that Scotus advocates.
Similar(49)
Or, if what started out as a routine doctor office visit actually entailed something more complicated.
Wartime emotion moved Hassam to eloquence, which entailed something like true Impressionism at last.
"Different social norms could entail something entirely different: yearly renewable contracts, for example".
"Community architecture" would have entailed something tweedy, worthy and useful on the site, but that was long forgotten.
Remarkably, he found that a simple modification of general relativity's equations entailed something that would have, well, blown Newton's mind: antigravity — a gravitational force that pushes instead of pulls.
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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