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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a more explicitly" is not correct in written English.
It should be used in a context where you are comparing levels of explicitness, typically followed by a noun.
Example: "The report provides a more explicit explanation of the findings than the previous version."
Alternatives: "a clearer" or "a more detailed".
Exact(38)
Such a convention might well resolve – finally – to forge a more explicitly federal system.
Other films of this type take a more explicitly critical view of the city.
The Big Short has a broader focus than Margin Call and a more explicitly political perspective.
In ancient Egypt, religious ritual moved toward a more explicitly theatrical enactment.
Kerry's years as a lawyer seem to have taught him a more explicitly political lesson as well.
Here, it becomes the subject of a more explicitly confessional show that is nearly as maddening as it is heartbreaking.
Similar(21)
An alternative to the graph clustering approach is to assemble sequences into putative homologous sets which can contain > 10,000 sequences in some cases, and use a more-explicitly phylogenetic strategy to subdivide these sets into groups of putative orthologs.
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.
As I said earlier, the homoerotic has come through a lot more explicitly in these last two books, but it took me a long time to get there.
This is a much more explicitly two-way relationship than in traditional professional care.
"But let's make them a bit more explicitly drunk and slurring".
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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