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The phrase "which it explains" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when referring to a subject or topic that is being clarified or elaborated upon in a preceding statement. Example: "The theory presented in the article is complex, which it explains in detail through various examples."
Exact(1)
A question that must be answered by any defender of this kind of response is the extent to which it explains, first, our persistence in seeking out music that elicits negative emotional experiences and, second, the enjoyment we seem to take in these negative responses, as opposed to putting up with them for their related benefits.
Similar(59)
That's right - one hundred and ninety-two cores, which it explained at aching length in a burdensome presentation on Sunday.
The nonprofit association says it invests 90 percent of its revenue directly back into its student-athletes.
The factor "school" had an effect only on physical quality of life, for which it explained 2% of the residual variance.
Osterhaus says the Rotterdam team has done so in a separate editorial, in which it also explains its "genuflection" to NSABB's demands.
(The process can still go awry. Even now Chef Watson recommends an ingredient called "Mollusk", which it helpfully explains is "the sixth full-length album by Ween").
In a conventional, undulatory cilium the 9(3) centriole grades into the 9(2) structure of the ciliary axoneme, which it constructs, explaining the fundamental similarity of the two structures.
"It's being used for exactly the purpose for which it was intended," explains one budget official who requested anonymity.
Other pundits thought it was a good time for "bottom fishing", which, it should be explained, means buying shares cheaply.
WHO has referred the finding, which it did not explain in detail, to the U.K. General Medical Council (GMC), it announced Thursday.
It has a whiff of alcohol about it, which explains why eating it gives you this hot feeling inside – like you've downed a shot of vodka.
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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