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The phrase "a larger consequence for" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing the broader implications or effects of a particular action or event on a specific subject or group.
Example: "The new policy may have a larger consequence for low-income families, affecting their access to essential services."
Alternatives: "a greater impact on" or "a more significant effect for".
Exact(1)
Rage and anger can actually just burn you out and make you not able to keep fighting and that's a larger consequence for our movement".
Similar(59)
A larger consequence of Franklin's craving for control is that her audience has been denied one of her greatest treasures.
As far as we know, this is the first study which evidenced there is an acclimation to an agricultural chemical in earthworms derived from conventional farming that also relates to a change in their burrowing behaviour, and for which larger consequences for the soil ecosystem need to be addressed.
Tackle inefficiency in both sectors: Inefficient and incompetent management practices in the private sector typically have much larger consequences for the individual (they will be fired) and for the organisation (they will go bust).
"A lot of people are questioning Merrill's decision to downgrade Intel," said Alan Ackerman at Fahnestock & Co. "The Street isn't interpreting this as bearing larger consequences for the whole industry".
But what are the larger consequences for deep discounts on e-books, or Amazon's incentivized pricing system?
These positions did, however, have significantly higher MAPP scores than random selections of other polymorphic codons, which indicates that they are predicted to have larger consequences for protein function than randomly selected amino acid positions.
Small changes in policy could have large consequences for nutrition.
There appear to be "good ones and bad ones" competing in fat tissue, with potentially large consequences for inflammation and diabetes.
The ice and snow melt from the Himalayas, in combination with changes in the nature of precipitation, would have equally large consequences for millions of people.
Analysts say it could have particularly large consequences for Tishman Speyer Properties and Blackrock Realty Advisors, who in 2006 bought the Stuyvesant Town and Peter Cooper Village complexes, which comprise 11,227 apartments on the East Side of Manhattan, for a record $5.4 billion.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com