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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a more complicated system" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when comparing the complexity of different systems or discussing the intricacies of a particular system.
Example: "The new software update introduces a more complicated system for managing user permissions."
Alternatives: "a more complex system" or "a more intricate system".
Exact(27)
"If we start with these simple systems and really understand molecular interactions, then [we] can gradually build up to a more complicated system," she explains.
He also said "there was no doubt" that having a more complicated system would cost more and that it was a legitimate issue to raise in a campaign.
The detailed approach to a more complicated system provides new insights that can aid in design of appropriate photocatalysts for a more complicated polluted target.
Thus, while rotating RO is a more complicated system than spiral wound RO, it provides better rejection of contaminants at very high recoveries.
As Brian Horne, senior knowledge manager at the Energy Saving Trust, says: If you're already managing your heating well with standard heating controls, then you won't save much more with a more complicated system.
The all-in-one computers, like Apple Computer's iMac (which runs the Mac operating system) or Gateway's Astro PC (which runs Windows), can simplify the hardware and software set-up process and cost much less than a more complicated system.
Similar(33)
However, analysis of the PL reveals a much more complicated system of interaction and coupling between the dots.
Instead, also mechanical resonances of the SPM setup and possibly even non-linearities of the tip-sample interaction have to be taken into account, rendering the tip sample system a much more complicated system in terms of transfer characteristic.
Twitter has a slightly more complicated system that's more akin to how Gmail used to handle the accounts of deceased users and which involves sending copies of birth certificates, drivers licenses and signed statements (and an optional clipping of a newspaper obituary) to Twitter.
For example, Americans value directness in verbal communication (c.f., "line of reasoning," "to the point," "don?t beat around the bush"), whereas Japanese scientists--and, presumably, other Japanese people--utilize a much more complicated system of nonverbal communication and avoid direct confrontation.
Add brainpower in evolution, and these quantitative increments, applied to a vastly more complicated system, can produce qualitative wonders even beyond our present comprehension clearly illustrated by our rudimentary Internet, and computers that can already beat the greatest human chess players.
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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