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'may usually have' is a perfectly correct and usable part of a sentence in written English.
You can use it to indicate that something is likely to be true, though not always necessarily the case. For example, "Large companies may usually have more resources available to them than small businesses."
Exact(1)
A simple explanation is that the F is higher copy (2 3 for every chromosome), and so may usually have a sister molecule with which to repair (Fig. 2B and C), whereas during starvation the chromosome may be limited to duplications as repair partners (Fig. 2A).
Similar(59)
If appropriate cardiopulmonary supports are provided, patients may survive but usually have sequelae: for example, central hypoventilation; cranial nerve palsy such as dysphagia, abducens palsy, and facial palsy; and shoulder weakness and atrophy.
Infants and toddlers with OI type IV may have light blue sclerae and usually have DI, which may be subtle.
Mandatory attendance provisions and penalties for nonattendance may hurt mothers, who usually have child care responsibilities, she added.
As patients treated by specialist are mostly complex cases, we may assume that they usually have higher health care utilization.
These plans don't usually have may downloads.
They may have daddy issues; I usually have no idea.
This may help explain why ACPs usually have a higher specificity toward certain tumor cells compared to normal eukaryotic cells.
By using CMI instead of MI, we can remove the background bias of MI in a local region, as shown in Figure 2. In the case that there are only a small number of sequence homologs available, some conserved positions, which usually have entropy <0.3, may have very low MI, which may result in artificially high CMI.
Coffee shops and fast food restaurants usually have free Wi-Fi that may or may not be password protected.
Second, a self-controlled design may be advantageous for conditions that usually have a bilateral pattern.
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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