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Discover Ludwig"implausible claim" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
You can use it when someone makes a claim that is not likely to be true. For example, "The politician made an implausible claim that he could solve all of the nation's problems in a matter of months."
Exact(22)
This is a bold, implausible claim.
Pressure from shareholders, however, has not.On the face of it, that looks an implausible claim.
This was a bold, but not implausible, claim at the time.
In the report, Chilcot seems to accept Manning's implausible claim that this unequivocal commitment was actually about setting conditions.
Turnbull was taking out full-page newspaper ads trying to hammer home his implausible claim that unless they switched to the Coalition the country would descend into "chaos".
Although the Iraqis have promised to cooperate with the U.N., Baghdad's implausible claim to be weapons-free suggests that Saddam Hussein may have different plans.
Similar(36)
A politician who made such implausible claims might merit a front-page story in the Times.
To be sure, dieters have long been seduced by implausible claims.
And emerging accounts of the closed-door hearing at Hefei intermediate people's court include apparently implausible claims and contradictions.
Finally there was the furtive transfer of formal sovereignty to Ayad Allawi, with implausible claims that this showed progress -- a fantasy exploded by the guns of August.
But they lament a system in which traders and buyers all too readily accept implausible claims about treasures that seem to appear out of nowhere.
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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