Jan. 29, 2021
My reservations about this experiments have been vindicated by the laboratory's results.
"I think I understand what you mean, but I doubt that it will come over to a broader audience if you use that much business jargon."
"I will go along with you as your recommendations have always proven useful in the long run"
My reservations about this experiments have been vindicatjustified by the laboratory's results.
I'm not sure if you mean "vindicated" here. Vindicated means shown to be true despite considerable doubt, and is often used in a context of clearing someone of blame (i.e. "They falsely thought I was a murderer, but the evidence vindicated me."). Justified is the more typical usage for an academic context.
If the results proved your reservations wrong, then "vindicated" isn't right. Some options would be: "have been proven false by..." "have been invalidated by...".
Sentences 006: Lab results, avoiding jargon, going along
My reservations about this experiments have been vindicated by the laboratory's results.
This is if you're talking about one experiment.
"I think I understand what you mean, but I doubt that it will come oveacross as clear to a broader audience if you use thatso much business jargon.
You could also say "...I doubt it will be clear to a..." or "be understood by a broader..."
"I will go along with you as your recommendations have always proven useful in the long run"
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Good stuff! You're getting into advanced vocabulary.
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Sentences 006: Lab results, avoiding jargon, going along This sentence has been marked as perfect! |
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My reservations about this experiments have been vindicated by the laboratory's results. My reservations about this experiment This is if you're talking about one experiment. My reservations about this experiment I'm not sure if you mean "vindicated" here. Vindicated means shown to be true despite considerable doubt, and is often used in a context of clearing someone of blame (i.e. "They falsely thought I was a murderer, but the evidence vindicated me."). Justified is the more typical usage for an academic context. If the results proved your reservations wrong, then "vindicated" isn't right. Some options would be: "have been proven false by..." "have been invalidated by...". |
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"I think I understand what you mean, but I doubt that it will come over to a broader audience if you use that much business jargon. "I think I understand what you mean, but I doubt that it will come You could also say "...I doubt it will be clear to a..." or "be understood by a broader..." |
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"I will go along with you as your recommendations have always proven useful in the long run" This sentence has been marked as perfect! |
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