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Discover LudwigThe phrase "inferences of" is correct and usable in written English.
It is used to refer to something that has been determined or inferred from evidence. For example, "The inferences of the research suggested that the new program was a success."
Exact(60)
Instead, he said, traders are making snap inferences or reacting to the snap inferences of others.
And I don't eat, for fear that nourishment will hurt me with its inferences of pleasure.
It is easy to mock privilege-checking, with its inferences of loony leftiness and pulsating liberal guilt.
Modus ponens refers to inferences of the form A ⊃ B; A, therefore B. Modus tollens refers to inferences of the form A ⊃ B; ∼B, therefore, ∼A (∼ signifies "not").
Ms. Taymor wants to show the darkness of his soul externally, she said, but to avoid the racist inferences of depicting him as black.
The chief descendants of the Anasazi are the Hopi and Zuni tribes, which have never practiced cannibalism and object to archaeologists' inferences of cannibalism by their prehistoric ancestors.
They're capable of making inferences, of solving complex puzzles, and of understanding what others are (and are not) likely to know.
Section 4 gives detailed posterior inferences of PF-ISFA.
The new work comes from the Tachyonic Retrospective Inferences of Cosmologically Extrapolated Preconditions, or TRICEP, imager.
The inferences of the case studies, simulated for both the schemes are tabulated in Table 5.
However, the literature is swamped with research disproving the inferences of the random walk hypothesis.
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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