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Discover LudwigThe phrase "would be failed" is not grammatically correct in written English.
It is missing a subject and an auxiliary verb. A correct usage could be "It would be failed by the system." Here, "it" is the subject and "would" is the auxiliary verb. This phrase could be used in a sentence discussing a potential failure of a system or process. Example: Despite our best efforts, the project would be failed by our outdated equipment.
Exact(9)
One expert, who led an independent inquiry into the Home Office guidance, said in January that "an undergraduate would be failed" for producing such a document.
One dire possible scenario would be "failed elections (in 2009) with Karzai having reduced legitimacy and with violence attributed to the campaign".
Roughly speaking, in this approach, a hypothesis is considered validated by data only if the data pass a test that would be failed ninety-five or ninety-nine per cent of the time if the data were generated randomly.
"An undergraduate would be failed for this sort of thing," said Campbell, a reader in the anthropology of Africa and law at the University of London, who has been a country expert on asylum claims from Eritrea and Ethiopia since the mid-1990s.
It warned if change didn't happen families and communities would be failed.
The final results of the analysis indicate that the there is approximately 95% confidence that the regulatory criteria under consideration would be failed given the high level of physical data provided.
Similar(51)
However, its computational complexity is high and its estimation accuracy would be fail in texture-less and occluded regions.
They are reaching children that the statutory services cannot and saving children who would otherwise be failed".
"Atlantic had so serially failed," he said, "that it was overwhelmingly likely the next thing we would do was fail, and the next thing we would do was fail".
"If the north side [of Milwaukee] were a nation, it would be a failed state.
That would be to fail twice over.
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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