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Discover LudwigThe phrase "refers to" is grammatically correct and commonly used in written English
It is typically used to indicate that a particular word, phrase, or idea is being explained or defined in more detail. You can use it in a sentence to clarify the meaning of a specific term or to provide additional context. Example: In this essay, the term "diversity" refers to the inclusion of individuals from different backgrounds, cultures, and perspectives. Example: When discussing the novel, the phrase "character development" refers to how a character changes and grows throughout the story.
Exact(4)
The OCHEM record refers to one compound only.
The term "scientific record" refers to the totality of published scientific findings in history.
In China, the term EMR (electronic medical record) refers to the record of patient episodes in one hospital.
Every record refers to an association, that is, if a given study analyzes k different markers from the same gene, GAD keeps them into k different records performing k different associations.
Similar(56)
Only last week the Daily Record referred to England's magnificent World Cup-winning side as "Sir Clive's Smarmy Army".
The US news website TwinCities.com warned that "Biden's own worst enemy may be his own record", referring to his comments last year that Obama was "not ready" to be president.
The IEA's executive director even went on record referring to those concerned about peak oil as "doomsayers".
But the Hitlerian contempt for non-Aryan peoples was difficult to suppress as Hitler is on record referring to Arabs as "half-monkeys".
If records were confirmed as a 'match' (i.e. the NSHPC record referred to the same woman as the UK CHIC record) they were merged and moved to a 'combined dataset'.
The program calculates probabilities to identify whether a pair of records refers to the same person.
Probabilistic record linkage uses probabilities to determine whether a pair of records refers to the same individual (19), based on the degree of matching between several individual characteristics, such as names, sex, date of birth and address.
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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