C1 Expression बहुत औपचारिक 2 मिनट पढ़ने का समय

Multiple comparisons revealed

Research methodology and reporting expression

Use this phrase to introduce specific findings after you have analyzed and compared several different groups of data.

15 सेकंड में

  • Used to introduce findings after analyzing several data groups.
  • Common in academic papers, medical reports, and business analytics.
  • Signals thoroughness and statistical validity to the reader.

मतलब

This phrase is used to explain that after looking at many different groups or sets of data, the researchers found specific patterns or differences. It is like saying, 'After checking every possible combination, here is what we discovered.'

मुख्य उदाहरण

3 / 6
1

Writing a university thesis

Multiple comparisons revealed a significant difference between the two age groups.

Multiple comparisons revealed a significant difference between the two age groups.

💼
2

Presenting a quarterly business review

Multiple comparisons revealed that our Tokyo branch outperformed all other locations.

Multiple comparisons revealed that our Tokyo branch outperformed all other locations.

💼
3

Discussing a medical study with a colleague

Multiple comparisons revealed that the side effects were only present in the high-dosage group.

Multiple comparisons revealed that the side effects were only present in the high-dosage group.

👔
🌍

सांस्कृतिक पृष्ठभूमि

This phrase is a cornerstone of the 'Scientific Method' culture prevalent in Western academia. It gained massive popularity in the mid-20th century as statistical software made complex data analysis easier for everyone. It signals that the speaker respects rigorous evidence and objective truth.

💡

The 'Reveal' Power

Use this phrase right before your most important discovery. It builds anticipation for the reader.

⚠️

Don't Overuse It

If you use this phrase five times in one page, you'll sound like a broken calculator. Use it once per section.

15 सेकंड में

  • Used to introduce findings after analyzing several data groups.
  • Common in academic papers, medical reports, and business analytics.
  • Signals thoroughness and statistical validity to the reader.

What It Means

Think of this phrase as the 'big reveal' in a science story. It tells you that the researchers didn't just look at one thing. They compared many different groups or variables. After doing all that math, they found something important. It is the moment where the data starts to make sense.

How To Use It

You usually put this at the start of a sentence in a report. Use it to introduce your main findings. It acts as a bridge between your math and your results. It sounds very professional and precise. You are telling your reader that you were thorough. You didn't just guess; you checked everything.

When To Use It

Use this when you have a lot of data to talk about. It is perfect for university essays or business analytics. If you are presenting a marketing report, use it to show why one group liked your product more than another. It makes you sound like an expert who knows their statistics. It is the 'detective' moment of a research paper.

When NOT To Use It

Do not use this at a casual dinner party. If you say, Multiple comparisons revealed that your pizza is better than your friend's, people will think you are a robot. Avoid it in text messages unless you are joking. It is too heavy for simple, everyday choices. Don't use it if you only compared two things. That would be a single comparison, not multiple!

Cultural Background

This phrase comes from the world of academic statistics. In Western science, being transparent about your methods is a huge deal. There is a famous problem called 'p-hacking' where people run too many tests. Using this phrase shows you are following the rules of logic. It reflects a culture that values data over feelings. It has become a standard 'power phrase' in global business English.

Common Variations

You might hear Post-hoc tests showed or Pairwise comparisons indicated. These are just fancier ways of saying the same thing. In a business meeting, someone might say, Looking across the segments, we found.... However, Multiple comparisons revealed remains the gold standard for formal writing. It is the classic way to start a results section.

इस्तेमाल की जानकारी

This is a high-level academic and professional expression. It belongs in the 'Results' or 'Discussion' section of a paper. Avoid using it in the 'Introduction' unless you are summarizing someone else's work.

💡

The 'Reveal' Power

Use this phrase right before your most important discovery. It builds anticipation for the reader.

⚠️

Don't Overuse It

If you use this phrase five times in one page, you'll sound like a broken calculator. Use it once per section.

💬

The Humorous Nerd

Native speakers sometimes use this phrase sarcastically to sound 'too smart' when talking about simple things like choosing a movie.

उदाहरण

6
#1 Writing a university thesis
💼

Multiple comparisons revealed a significant difference between the two age groups.

Multiple comparisons revealed a significant difference between the two age groups.

This is the standard way to report scientific results.

#2 Presenting a quarterly business review
💼

Multiple comparisons revealed that our Tokyo branch outperformed all other locations.

Multiple comparisons revealed that our Tokyo branch outperformed all other locations.

Used here to show the data analysis was deep and wide.

#3 Discussing a medical study with a colleague
👔

Multiple comparisons revealed that the side effects were only present in the high-dosage group.

Multiple comparisons revealed that the side effects were only present in the high-dosage group.

Very common in medical and pharmaceutical contexts.

#4 Joking with a friend about dating apps
😄

Multiple comparisons revealed that guys with dogs get 50% more likes.

Multiple comparisons revealed that guys with dogs get 50% more likes.

Using a formal phrase for a silly topic creates a humorous effect.

#5 Analyzing family spending habits
😊

Multiple comparisons revealed we are spending way too much on coffee!

Multiple comparisons revealed we are spending way too much on coffee!

Adds a dramatic, 'official' weight to a household discovery.

#6 A scientist explaining a failed experiment
💭

Multiple comparisons revealed no significant patterns, unfortunately.

Multiple comparisons revealed no significant patterns, unfortunately.

Used to confirm that even after much effort, nothing was found.

खुद को परखो

Choose the best phrase to start a formal report about customer behavior.

___ that users prefer the mobile app over the desktop site.

✓ सही! ✗ बिलकुल नहीं। सही जवाब: Multiple comparisons revealed

This phrase provides the necessary formal tone for a professional report.

Complete the sentence to show you have analyzed several groups.

After checking all three test groups, ___ that Group B was the fastest.

✓ सही! ✗ बिलकुल नहीं। सही जवाब: multiple comparisons revealed

This indicates that a systematic comparison was performed.

🎉 स्कोर: /2

विज़ुअल लर्निंग टूल्स

Formality Spectrum

Casual

Talking to friends

I noticed that...

Neutral

General office talk

The data shows that...

Formal

Business reports

Analysis indicated that...

Very Formal

Scientific journals

Multiple comparisons revealed...

Where to use 'Multiple comparisons revealed'

Multiple comparisons revealed
🧪

Academic Paper

Reporting lab results

📊

Marketing Deck

Comparing ad campaigns

💊

Medical Journal

Explaining drug trials

💻

Tech Presentation

A/B testing results

अक्सर पूछे जाने वाले सवाल

10 सवाल

It means you compared more than two groups or variables. For example, comparing children, teens, and adults would count as multiple comparisons.

Usually, no. It is very formal. In a casual email, you should say I looked at the numbers and found... instead.

No, you can also use indicated, showed, or suggested. However, revealed sounds the most definitive and exciting.

Yes, it is almost always followed by the word that and then a full clause, like Multiple comparisons revealed that [result].

Yes, it is standard across all varieties of professional and academic English, including British, American, and Australian.

The data showed is fine, but Multiple comparisons revealed is more specific. it tells the reader exactly how you analyzed the data.

It is mostly used for quantitative (number-based) research. For interviews or stories, you might say Thematic analysis revealed instead.

Only if it is a formal presentation. In a casual speech, it might sound a bit stiff or 'wooden'.

In statistics, this refers to the risk of finding a pattern just by luck because you looked at too many things. This phrase acknowledges you did the work correctly.

Yes, revealed is almost always past tense because you are reporting on work that you have already finished.

संबंधित मुहावरे

Statistical analysis indicated

A formal way to say the math showed a specific result.

A significant correlation was found

Used when two things seem to change together in a meaningful way.

The findings suggest

A slightly softer way to introduce results without being 100% certain.

Cross-tabulation showed

A specific type of comparison between two different categories.

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