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Discover Ludwig"making linkages" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when you are referring to establishing connections or relationships between ideas. For example, "In this essay, I will be making linkages between the political and economic systems of Germany and France."
Exact(10)
Ultimately, scribes would have been responsible for making linkages between future astronomical events and sacred rituals, enabling rulers to connect important public rituals with such celestial events as eclipses.
As innovation is the art and science of making linkages among ideas that already exist but are not currently recognized, the use of innovation methodologies will become more widely used.
IM was chosen for the current program analysis because its inherent structured step-wise approach is ideal for making linkages between program elements and expected program outcomes.
The WTCHP discontinued collecting SSN in 2006 because of privacy concerns among some responders, with the potential of making linkages with state tumor registries more challenging.
4. Expand the national IMAM guidelines making linkages to the other interventions or develop them as part of HINI guidelines, including detail on information and monitoring systems and equity and gender equality.
All Danish residents have a unique 10-digit personal identification number (CPR number), which is used across all public registration systems, making linkages between various registry-based databases possible.
Similar(50)
Lower variability means that they reveal fewer informative meioses, making linkage between markers harder to detect.
In addition, concerns about confidentiality may limit the reporting of specific locations, making linkage to external data more difficult.
Information about the presence of large homozygous segments can reveal gaps and the occurrence of an excessive number of partial linkage groups when making linkage maps in outbreeding plant species.
The population was identified in the Central Population Registry in which all residents in Denmark are registered by a unique 10 digital number, making linkage across time and registries possible.
However, affectation status was not always clear cut: five family members were said to have 'definite' cervical dystonia, whereas five family members were said to have 'possible' cervical dystonia, making linkage analysis difficult (Uitti and Maraganore, 1993).
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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