From the formal writing?

I want to say the following sentence in the most formal manner:

These stunning data are from instruments like” M-Doesn’t

any word precede each other?

(I think the verbs “gather”, “collect”, “achieve” well suits to being used in this context.)

Asked on March 15, 2021 in Word choice.
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4 Answer(s)

As a formal speaker, how do you speak? Consist

These stunning data are drawn from such instruments as…..

Where can I go for more information?

Answered on March 15, 2021.
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I’d go with “collect”.

While “gather” is not wrong, it has the undertone of scurrying around to find it, a randomness – think of “hunters and gatherers” in the Stone Age. What happens when we gather twigs for a campfire, a hen gathers her chicks under her wings?

When we collect stamps, how do we collect them? i suppose your data collection follows methodical procedures and has a work a purpose.

“Achieve” marks out the effort involved (-> (-> achievement), so unless you want to stress that you had to do a lot of unusual work with your meassurements, you shouldn’t use it here.

Why do men write data that is
“stunning”, but is used by a male for very good looking sex girls? Most Hollywood actresses fall into this category 😉 This isn’t wrong, though. Scientific papers often have tongue-in-cheek titles..you might want to appear
more serious and choose “surprising”, “unusual” or something else that fits your context.

Answered on March 15, 2021.
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How does set the data

or gather data and collect the data?

I won’t prefer achieve because that is used mainly for humans as they get something after making efforts. But with more focus, I’ll be capable of accepting everything. For a machine collecting data, achieve would be a bad choice.

Another typical word I get is fetch data.

Note: I wonder which way data is stunning? What are some examples of using adjective with data in a program? :))

Answered on March 15, 2021.
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There are many variations of this recipe. You can try it with any combination of them. In many linguistic contexts, data is used as a plural noun instead of a noun. In other linguistic contexts, data is a singular noun. Sometimes a plural noun is used as a plural noun.

The following data has been collated using instruments including instrument 1, instrument 2, etc,… You could also replace

the words “collected” with “sourced”. e.g. by

using the plural noun or using the plural noun and Collabated.

In the previous sentence, the sentences have also changed the emphasis. In this sentence this set of data has been

sourced from the following instruments: instrument 1, instrument 2, etc,… In the sentence above you are taking the data from the instruments.

Where can I find the data

extracted from the following instruments?

A good word to describe a set of data is rich. This means that there is a lot of good quality data.

As you can see there are lots of different variations you can try!

I like the term “” although I don’t like the word “” because it sounds

weak.”

Answered on March 15, 2021.
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