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The phrase "a bit more explicitly" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when you want to request or indicate that something should be stated in a clearer or more detailed manner.
Example: "Could you explain your reasoning a bit more explicitly so that everyone can understand your point?"
Alternatives: "a little clearer" or "more clearly stated".
Exact(5)
"But let's make them a bit more explicitly drunk and slurring".
The teacher just needs to be aware of the dyslexia and teach slightly differently: much more visually, acting things out and explaining things a bit more explicitly than they would to other students.
In the Euclidean and hyperbolic cases, we got all the information from the covariance function of the field; here we can dispense with the covariance function and describe such a field, say (varPhi_{ell}), a bit more explicitly than we could do for the previous invariance structures.
We would thus encourage the authors to emphasize a bit more explicitly the idea that the two cycles might have been coupled but apparently are not.
The authors should state the novelty of their finding a bit more explicitly, so they avoid leading the readers to the erroneous conclusion that the current clock is 'exclusively' based on repressors".
Similar(54)
Such a recollection of his trip to Afghan outpost seems a bit more dramatic than the one Kirk gave to the Lake County News Sun one year prior, in which he explicitly said that "getting shot at" didn't happen.
A bit more so.
So, a bit more.
A bit more mature".
And a bit more.
Show us a bit more.
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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