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Discover LudwigThe phrase "which observes that" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to introduce a statement or finding that is being noted or acknowledged in a discussion or analysis. Example: "The research paper presents several key findings, one of which observes that climate change is accelerating at an unprecedented rate."
Exact(9)
Dillon quotes from a 17th-century thesis which observes that hypochondriacs can suffer spasms as a result of "sudden Outcry, or the very opening of a Door".
Then there's "Sand," from an unproduced 1992 film musical, "Singing Out Loud," which observes that "Love is just grand/ Until you feel it stinging your eyes".
He acknowledges the positive impact of Moore's Law (which observes that computer-processing power doubles approximately every two years), and the progress it is generating in robotics, genetics, data analysis, and other areas.
"Liberation" begins with an odd preface by Edmund White, which observes that Isherwood was anti-Semitic, "a dreadful hypochondriac" and nasty about women, but nonetheless concludes that he was "generally admirable".
The economic crisis has not abolished Moore's law (which observes that computing power, and thus the power of electronic devices, has doubled about every two years since the invention of the computer chip, in 1958).
There was humor, too; singing "En El Último Trago" ("In the Last Drink"), which observes that the years have taught her nothing, she pointed cheerfully to her gray hair.
Similar(51)
A recent study accounted well for this observation which observed that the regulatory genes with stronger regulatory action on the other genes are the targets of selection within the complex regulatory networks inferred from a simulation study using a matrix model [ 44].
In a revealing 2014 New York piece, which observed that real-estate ownership in the city "can be made as untraceable as a numbered bank account," a developer concludes, "The global elite is basically looking for a safe-deposit box".
He is "rather dangerous," declared The Economist, which observed that he "genuinely believes in the need to create a fairer society".
Although he could have built 20 or more floors, Astor held it to 7, earning the praise of The Times, which observed that comparing Platt's building to the surviving half of the hotel "makes this old remnant more odious".
As an illustration, the decision quoted the brief of the state of Hawaii, the principal plaintiff, which observed that the order "could have the paradoxical effect of barring entry by a Syrian national who has lived in Switzerland for decades, but not a Swiss national who has immigrated to Syria during its civil war".
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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