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Example sentences for "more frequent"

  • Lastly, I may add that earthquakes are apparently more frequent in the Mbua district, where no thermal springs are known, than in any other part of the island.

  • It may be added that the basic tuffs are more frequent on the west and south sides of the island.

  • Imperfect closure is more frequent in males than in females, because of the great length and small caliber of the male urethra and its consequent tendency to obstruction.

  • It is more frequent in districts where marshy lands dry out during the heat of summer and are then covered with light rains.

  • The discharge then gradually decreases, the cough becomes less rasping, but of more frequent occurrence, until it gradually disappears with the return of health.

  • The same is the case with another (more frequent) species, namely, 5.

  • In rare instances, these long flakes have not been removed, in others of more frequent occurrence, one of the flakes has broken off short before attaining its full length.

  • Axe-heads of a much more clumsy character than any of those last described are of more frequent occurrence in this country.

  • Celts with an edge at each end are rare on the Continent, though they are of more frequent occurrence in Ireland.

  • The moth is out in late April sometimes, but it is more frequent in May and June, and as a second generation in August, earlier or later in some seasons.

  • They are, however, completely severed by being cut or ruptured, though fibrillary fracture the result of constant or intermittent tensile strain is of more frequent occurrence.

  • Bell[8] strain of the biceps brachii is a frequent cause of lameness in city horses, more frequent than is generally supposed.

  • This form of injury is of more frequent occurrence in animals of all ages that work on paved streets.

  • A more frequent accident is Asphyxia, or want of breathing, in which case the surface of the body is cold and pale, and no breath whatever is drawn, though the heart beats quite naturally.

  • Like simple swelling, it may arise at any time during nursing, but is more frequent a few days after delivery.

  • It appears to have been more frequent in Holland than elsewhere, to be more frequent in Europe generally than in the United States, and now much less frequent in the United States than formerly.

  • It is more frequent in the first two weeks of life than later.

  • The first form is said to {245} be more frequent in women, while the second is more frequent in males; and this accords with my own observation and experience.

  • We shall first treat of inflammation of the more external parts of the ball, an affection generally less dangerous than inflammation of the interior, but at the same time of more frequent occurrence, and produced by slighter causes.

  • The disease would appear to be more frequent in males than in females, though the relative proportion has not been ascertained.

  • Hence cirsocele is more frequent in hot than in temperate climates, and worse in summer than in winter.

  • It is more frequent in males than females.

  • It is more frequent in the negro and in those who are, or have been, the subjects of tuberculous disease.

  • Such attacks may recur only once a year or they may be more frequent; the successive attacks tend to become less acute but last longer, and the local phenomena persist, the joint remaining permanently swollen and stiff.

  • Aneurysm of the common carotid is more frequent on the right than on the left side, and is usually situated either at the root of the neck or near the bifurcation.

  • On the Continent, especially in Holland, it is more frequent.

  • The Prevalence of Masturbation--Its Occurrence in Infancy and Childhood--Is it More Frequent in Males or Females?

  • Under the influence of domestication, animals tend to lose the strict periodicity of the wild condition, and become apt for breeding at more frequent intervals.

  • The lesions of pleurisy are met with in a small proportion of cases; in our own autopsies this complication was more frequent than in most epidemics.

  • The pulse is more frequent, and may be as high as 144 in cases in which the prognosis is not grave.

  • As a rule, the pulse is more frequent in cases which terminate fatally than in those which end in recovery; but to this rule there are numerous exceptions.

  • Purulent otorrhoea from one or both ears is of more frequent occurrence, and without any special exciting cause may present itself at any time during the course of the disease or more commonly after the relapse.

  • As a multiple-unit train can be controlled from either end, a more frequent as well as a more flexible service can be run.

  • The practical result of rapid acceleration (combined with rapid braking) is not only to give a higher average speed but also to enable a more frequent service to be run.

  • In the succeeding chapter it is explained how electric traction enables a more frequent service to be run with advantage even on systems which were worked to the maximum limit possible under steam conditions.

  • I have perused your Tatler of this day,[20] and have wept over it with great pleasure: I wish you would be more frequent in your family pieces.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "more frequent" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    form water; more accurately; more before; more certain; more closely; more common; more complicated; more delightful; more effectual; more eligible; more formal; more inclined; more instances; more liable; more long; more questions; more quickly; more real; more reasonable; more regular; more slave; more specifically; more striking; more times; more useful; perfectly well