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The phrase "explanatory remarks" is a perfectly valid and usable phrase in English.
It is usually used to refer to comments made after a statement or action in order to provide more context or clarification. For example, "I received an unexpected bill from my electric company. In explanatory remarks, they said that the bill was due to a change in rate."
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Here, Selim was the narrator, interjecting explanatory remarks between numbers.
"You take an idea, you look at it," said the violist Kim Kashkashian, quoting Mr. Kurtag in brief and illuminating explanatory remarks before the performance.
Newton consistently denies that it is essential (for instance in his explanatory remarks following Rule 3 of the Principia) and Locke refers to it only as power superadded or endowed by God.
Although the interpretation of the results is not the main focus of this case study, some explanatory remarks are provided as an example for other uncertainty assessments with BMA and Probabilistic Uncertainty.
This may involve explanatory remarks of what your field entails, what the purpose of your paper is, and the kinds of resources used to gather evidence to provide proof for the assertions that you make.
Similar(55)
The REMARK profile will be published as a part of the forthcoming REMARK guideline explanatory document (personal communication REMARK guidelines group).
Nonetheless, I have also incorporated remarks about explanatory relationship that are based on my experience as a researcher.
Even though he stated that all such phrases are to be considered as illustrative and not as explanatory, the French mathematician Henri Poincaré remarked in 1899 that the "complicated structure" which Maxwell attributed to the ether "rendered his system strange and unattractive".
The same remark can be made about explanatory and systematic power.
We will begin with a few brief historical remarks (Section 2), and then turn to some general questions about supervenience, such as whether it is explanatory and whether it is guarantees entailment (Section 3).
But don't be put off by my remarks, or any initial impression – the first chapter is less than two pages, then come five pages of explanatory footnotes, with instructions for further reading.
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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