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"suggestive fact" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
You can use it to refer to any information that suggests something without being definitively true. For example, "The broken window in the house was a suggestive fact that someone had broken in."
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And there is one further, suggestive fact.
Similar(58)
Those suggestive facts put LGBT advocates in a difficult position: they wanted to respect Manning's chosen gender, but her arrest put her actual wishes in a state of indeterminacy, behind the veil of military custody.
Although these findings are suggestive, the fact that in the present study TNF-α blockade had only a modest limiting effect on disease activity indicates that TNF-α is not a major determinant of the pathophysiology in PMR.
But that my own background and interests led me there is suggestive of the fact that we in fact live 'on the shoulders of giants' and that the spiritual groundwork has actually been quite cultivated I wonder if I had come up into the art world in New York if I would have been drawn to the esoteric, or is it the landscape itself that draws us?
The Academy's headquarters are housed in an impassive, mirrored-glass structure on Wilshire Boulevard, suggestive of the fact that Ampas does not like to reveal much about its inner workings.
That may either be a) understandable protection of her company's image or b) suggestive of the fact that she's in it up to her sour mush in evil, possibly though not necessarily with her freaky-deaky brother.
Ethically, this is commendable, but it throws the arc of the drama out of whack, while a more suggestive subplot — the fact that Uxbal is psychic, paid by locals to converse with their dead — is only touched on.
Between 1603 and 1606 he would receive only a handful of commissions for large-scale public religious paintings, a fact suggestive of the extent to which his style was out of tune with the times.
Even more suggestive is the fact that not long after writing this essay, Lewes and Evans were to embark upon one of the most notorious and productive literary love affairs of the nineteenth century—eloping to Germany in the fall of 1854, and living together as husband and wife for a quarter of a century, even though Lewes already had a wife, Agnes, from whom divorce was impossible.
It's impossible to establish a conclusive cause-and-effect relationship, but the finding is at least suggestive of the fact that economies populated by those whose wealth is self-made are more dynamic than those that rely on the perpetuation of existing economic elites and their descendants.
Even more suggestive is the fact that not long after writing this essay, Lewes and Evans were to embark upon one of the most notorious and productive literary love affairs of the nineteenth century — eloping to Germany in the fall of 1854, and living together as husband and wife for a quarter of a century, even though Lewes already had a wife, Agnes, from whom divorce was impossible.
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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