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Discover Ludwig"point difference" is an acceptable part of written English.
It is often used when referring to a score difference between two teams or individuals, such as in the sentence "The final score of the game was 23-20, with only a three-point difference."
Exact(27)
That is a 6 point difference!
That's a one-hundred point difference!
On average, there is an 8 percentage point difference between the men and women who answered.
The 20.6 percentage point difference constitutes the worst job market perspective since late 2003.
The chart shows the 6.8 percentage point difference between the two figures.
Coincidentally, Nadal won 146 points for the match to Federer's 130 – exactly a 16 point difference.
Similar(33)
Then, there was a two-point difference between the parties.
The seven-point difference that CNN had is not typical.
Yet that 15-point difference in the margins of victory hides more than it reveals.
By contrast, 57 percent under age 40 said they supported it, a 26-point difference.
In "good" schools, the figures are 64% and 39%, which is again a 25-point difference.
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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