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Discover LudwigThe part of the sentence 'phenomena when' is correct and usable in written English
You can use it to refer to particular occurrences of a phenomenon or condition that is associated with a specific time or event. For example: The lecturer discussed the changes in economic phenomena when transitioning from an industrial to a service-oriented economy.
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It takes poverty and criminal exploitation as abstract phenomena, when in reality both are human creations.
In truth, these are not really experiments which, by definition, manipulate phenomena when results are unknown in advance.
Politicians typically talk about rising inequality and the sluggish recovery as separate phenomena, when they are in fact intertwined.
Born and raised in Southend, I was under the impression that funfairs, chip shops, and confectionery are naturally occurring phenomena when land encounters waves.
Russian politicians and state-affiliated journalists long ago stopped believing in sincere motives and only see cynical ones, and they are always ready to discount genuine, homegrown phenomena when belief in a foreign-directed plot will suffice.
Love of a foreign country and love of its women are honestly expressed as related phenomena (when Greene was asked why he came to Vietnam he answered "It was partly the beauty of the women - it was extraordinary").
This 22-year-old taxi driver found himself arrested by Afghan militiamen who were working with the US (the same militiamen were later found to have been the ones firing rockets at the US base – a worrying phenomena when allied with the statistic that only 7% of those held at Guantánamo were arrested by US forces).
It has been a career of growing reach (Davos and "The Late Show") and of rising rhetorical chutzpah; and, three years ago, it was hard not to notice both of these phenomena when he published "The World Is Flat," for which he chose a metaphor of flatness to describe economic globalization.
In 1903 he had the opportunity to amplify his views on the behaviour of subatomic particles in natural phenomena when, in his Silliman Lectures at Yale, he suggested a discontinuous theory of light; his hypothesis foreshadowed Einstein's later theory of photons.
He held forth on how Bedouin poetry shaped a moderate Islam in Libya, and he was just starting to explain the relevance to Libyan politics of the mathematical theory of complexity — it had to do with something called "flocking phenomena" — when his cellphone rang.
We can also find such phenomena when, and so on.
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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