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'has checked the changes' is correct and can be used in written English.
You can use it when referring to a person, either in the past or present tense, who has reviewed or examined a particular set of changes. For example, "After reviewing the document, the editor has checked the changes and approved the final version."
Exact(1)
According to a journalist at Nature [27], ESEU "conducted no scientific peer review" of Séralini, et al. [3], and the "role of the three reviewers that ESEU hired was to check that there had been no change in the scientific content of the paper".
Similar(59)
Firstly, we checked the changes of Erk1/2.
Apparently the terms and conditions said I should have checked for possible time changes 48 hours before the flight.
I was amused to discover my interests had scarcely changed; organically, I had checked many aspirations off the list.
In addition, since μ = 0.4 is assumed for the main computations, we have also checked the stress change dependence on the μ coefficient.
Check the changes: racadm getconfig -g cfgSerial.
Check the changes in your website.
If you do a lot of towing or submerge the differential under water, you'll have to check and change the gear oil more often.
"Availabilities have changed," I learned when I checked the order status online.
I just checked the Beta homepage and nothing has changed.
We have also checked whether the PC reacts to short-run changes in unemployment (ΔU t ).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com