Ai Feedback
"merely citing" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It means to mention or quote something without providing further explanation or analysis. Example: In her research paper, Maria supported her arguments with evidence from various sources, merely citing the relevant studies and their findings.
Exact(14)
She passionately sought the imprimatur of her political patrons for another six-year term by not merely citing how she had helped the district "go green".
For all the book's continuing interest, we should spend less time merely citing "The Two Cultures," and more time genuinely reconsidering it.
Mr. Obama, however, offered no insight into measures his administration might be contemplating, merely citing the humanitarian and nonlethal aid to the opposition that the United States has already pledged.
When he got letters disputing the facts in his very first article, he was at first chastened -- until he realized the letters were merely citing the industry-funded scientists.
Media groups and Marina Litvinenko are unhappy that the government has failed to give details of what it wants to keep secret, merely citing "national interest" and "international relations".
For instance, according to Cohen (1999, 80 82; 2001, 94) merely citing the existence conflicting arguments does not really explain what needs explaining.
Similar(44)
Atheism may be intellectually viable, but it requires its own arguments and can't merely cite the lack of decisive evidence for religion.
His selection of the word list and his well-phrased definitions made his work superior to previous works, although he did not give illustrative quotations but merely cited the names of authors.
argues that explanations that merely cite relations are insufficient to explain the traits typically found among zebras.
Studies were excluded if they: (1) did not include a definition, or at least a clear and concise description, of the word phishing; or (2) merely cited a definition of others.
Leininweber merely cited the Supreme Court, which in 1971 "warned of the dangers inherent in punishing public speech on public matters because of the particular words or tone of the speech".
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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