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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a more firm" is not correct in standard English; it should be "a firmer" to convey the comparative form of "firm." You can use it when comparing the firmness of two or more objects or concepts, emphasizing that one is firmer than the other.
Example: "The new mattress provides a firmer support than the old one."
Alternatives: "a stronger" or "a stiffer".
Exact(17)
As to this, a more firm basis for the simulation and design of stirred columns in hydrometallurgical application is established.
"We are taking a more firm stand, and there is less incentive to settle because we've now got the resources to proceed through the process".
Later constructs regarding human extensibility in time space, time space distanciation, and time space compression provided a more firm grounding for time space perspectives in theories of structuration, critical science, and capitalism.
These results place more firmly into context that robust prediction and/or indicator utility will require a more firm understanding of microorganism distribution in the landscape, the nature of host sources, and transport/environmental fate affinities among pathogens and indicators.
I was pleased to have the opportunity to work on an important thing, and I thought, Yes, if we could figure out a way to put this on a more firm legal footing, whether through judicial authority or legislative authority, that would be quite an important achievement, and it would be better for the country".
2) what other options might be considered by BAC to improve the bank's Tier 1 common and tangible common equity ratios in the absence of additional common equity?; and 3) can BAC provide a more firm estimate of future mortgage putback liabilities from the GSE and non GSE investors?
Similar(43)
If you like your eggs a little more firm, use a 9-inch skillet.
Talk to them again after about a month, but this time, you must be a lot more firm!
Sixteen laps later, Knaus was a little more firm and told Johnson it was "go time".
"We ought to be a bit more firm" now, he said.
This was resolved with the Fed Accord of 1951, which returned the dollar to a much more firm link to gold at its official $35 per ounce rate.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com