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Discover LudwigThe phrase 'singular statement' is correct and usable in written English.
It is used to refer to a single assertion or sentence that conveys a complete thought or idea. For example, "Life is short" is a singular statement which conveys a complete thought.
Exact(15)
There's no trend, no given shape, no definitive singular statement.
"Yankee Doodle Dandy," take it or leave it, makes its own singular statement, even in a genre that couldn't be more generic.
It is also a singular statement, in a familiar, minimal form – like Wolfgang Laib's floor-bound rectangles of yellow pollen, Richard Long's stones or Antony Gormley's fields of thousands of little humanoids.
JERUSALEM — Last month, on a freeway from Jerusalem to the Dead Sea, I sat in the driver's seat of an Audi A7 while software connected to a video camera on the windshield drove the car at speeds up to 65 miles an hour — making a singular statement about the rapid progress in the development of self-driving cars.
Would that she could team up with as lively and astute a chronicler of the human condition as Desiree Akhavan, star and director of Appropriate Behaviour (Peccadillo, 15), in which she plays a Persian-American bisexual muddling her way through the fraught Brooklyn social scene; it's a mottled but auspicious debut and a singular statement of identity.
Last month, on a freeway from Jerusalem to the Dead Sea, John Markoff sat in the driver's seat of an Audi A7 while software connected to a video camera on the windshield drove the car at speeds up to 65 miles an hour — making a singular statement about the rapid progress in the development of self-driving cars, he writes in The New York Times.
Similar(45)
Nobody wants singular statements.' Stone is pessimistic about his prospects of getting his own singular statements financed because he believes these attitudes are hardening.
"It is like experience of the world in real time, it reflects a complex world, not one that can be boiled down to singular statements or buzzwords.
Maintaining that some laws are singular statements about universals, they allow that some laws are contingently true.
Schlick (1931) thus followed Wittgenstein's own suggestion to treat them instead as representing rules for the formation of verifiable singular statements.
The philosophical debate concerning the truth-value of singular statements about future contingents derives from Chapter 9 of Aristotle's treatise De interpretatione (Peri hermeneias).
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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