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The phrase "are even more notable" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to emphasize that something is particularly significant or remarkable in comparison to something else.
Example: "The recent discoveries in the field of genetics are even more notable for their implications on human health."
Alternatives: "are particularly significant" or "are even more remarkable."
Exact(1)
Night and day". Longer-term declines are even more notable.
Similar(59)
Mr. Levine's shift has been even more notable.
Her appointment is even more notable as she is a Sunni Muslim in a Shia-dominated country.
This quirky, colorful gem is even more notable because it's in the middle of a scruffy, nondescript town.
But what this coastal city about 25 miles south of San Francisco may soon not have is even more notable.
The 21-year-old's performance was even more notable as it came on an exceptionally arduous 3.5-mile circuit.
The situation is even more notable at United, which was an employee-owned company before it sought bankruptcy protection.
Levein's decision to jettison Miller was even more notable given the striker's prolific early-season form for Rangers.
The impact of wind on the ion current density profile is even more notable than that on the resultant electric field.
Such activism is even more notable given the constraints the Communist Party typically imposes on public lobbying, street protests or any unsanctioned organizing.
Miley soon widened her advantage but a familiar freestyle attack from Rice, who won three golds at the 2008 Olympic in Beijing, was even more notable.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com