Your English writing platform
Discover Ludwig"reverse problem" is a grammatically correct phrase that you can use in written English.
Example sentence: We can solve this problem by taking a reverse problem approach and working backwards from the desired outcome.
Exact(58)
Ms. Smith's work suffers the reverse problem.
Developed countries have the reverse problem; they cannot control the inflow of mostly unskilled illegal immigrants and asylum-seekers.
Only a few months ago, American policy makers were worried about the reverse problem — rising prices, or inflation — as then-soaring costs for oil and food filtered through the economy.
But if androgens in their blood start turning barely visible vellus into visible terminal hair, they can find themselves with the reverse problem, particularly in societies where facial and body hair in women is considered unsightly.
Other languages suffer the reverse problem: what linguists call "domain loss", or a retreat from certain areas and survival in smaller circles, the home and the pub rather than the lecture hall.
Chuck Davis, chief executive of BizRate.com, a comparison-shopping site that ranks 2,000 merchants based on customer satisfaction and price, said: "People used to worry about sites that just didn't work or were hard to navigate, but now there's a reverse problem: it doesn't cost a lot to have a slick site, but behind it you might find two guys in a garage hawking gray-market goods".
Compaq had the reverse problem.
The first reverse problem identifies the property targets corresponding to the desired process performance.
We design an efficient algorithm for the reverse problem of the two-dimensional range query.
Similar(2)
Unmentioned is the reverse problem a false-negative finding which can also occur from an underpowered trial.
In this report, we describe the reverse problem the growing evidence that human herpesviruses endanger other primates (5 ).
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