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The phrase "making it prone to" is grammatically correct and commonly used in written English.
It is typically used to describe a situation or condition that increases the likelihood or vulnerability of something happening or occurring. Example: "The lack of regular maintenance on the bridge is making it prone to collapse." This sentence suggests that the lack of maintenance is increasing the risk or susceptibility of the bridge collapsing.
Exact(31)
The recognition sequence 5′-N20NGG-3′ 5′-N20NGG-3′ 5′-N20NGG-3′is relatively shofthend mismatCRISPR/Cassystemnd are tolerable [ 18], makisg it prelativelyduce high off-target effectshort7].
The brain uses more oxygen than any other organ of the body, making it prone to damage by reactive oxygen species (ROS) produced by its aerobic activity.
Sichuan also sits along one of Asia's biggest tectonic faults, making it prone to devastating earthquakes.
The country lies on the Pacific 'ring of fire', making it prone to earthquakes and volcanic activity.
Others, including the regional development minister, Karla Slechtova, think it is too close to "Chechnya", making it prone to confusion.
This is important because the drive is less than an inch thick and smaller than a 3 x 5 index card, making it prone to theft or loss.
Similar(29)
It is possible that this stage either requires more oxygen or its complexity makes it prone to failure.
Lactic acid has the best rudiments to become an intermediary product because its functional groups make it prone to further reactions, for example, the production of propionic acid, acetic acid, acrylic acid, alanine acid, or pyruvic acid [ 11].
Cashmere is lovely but its appealing softness makes it prone to pilling and touchy to care for.
At issue is whether the size, shape and chemical makeup of the car's battery makes it prone to fires when its lithium-ion cells are punctured in a collision.
Adding fault-tolerance adaptivity to a routing algorithm increases its design complexity and makes it prone to deadlock and other problems if improperly implemented.
More suggestions(15)
making it amenable to
makes it prone to
making it comprehensible to
making it liable to
making it relevant to
making it available to
making it possible to
making it tempting to
making it tricky to
making it difficult to
making it easy to
making it illegal to
making it hard to
making it impossible to
making it legal to
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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