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The phrase "are far more frequent" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to compare the frequency of two or more items, indicating that one occurs significantly more often than the other(s).
Example: "In urban areas, traffic accidents are far more frequent than in rural regions."
Alternatives: "occur much more often" or "are significantly more common."
Exact(35)
But the subtle "Wait, what just happened?" moments are far more frequent.
But they are far more frequent: over 40 in an average National Basketball Association NBAA) game.
Bias at work is sometimes overt and insidious, but the subtle, "Wait, what just happened?" moments are far more frequent.
The Innocence Project, the watchdog group that helped to defend Mr. Tankleff, has long argued that false confessions are far more frequent than is commonly believed.
Although asteroid impacts are far more frequent than comet impacts, some comets crossing Earth's orbit are considerably larger than any of the known near-Earth asteroids.
A finding that the quake had caused the damage would heighten concerns about nuclear plants in other areas, where big quakes are far more frequent than tsunamis.
Similar(25)
Indeed, the incidence of extreme events is far more frequent.
At the same time, rain patterns will be disrupted and droughts will be far more frequent.
Given the large amount of transposable elements in the maize genome, epialleles may be far more frequent than previously estimated.
"The occurrence of hijackings is going to be so rare," he said, but "air rage" is far more frequent.
As shown, InDels and SNPs were far more frequent in Gayal than in the other two breeds revealing that Gayal retained greater genetic diversity.
More suggestions(14)
are far more widespread
are dramatically more frequent
are far more numerous
are far more common
are significantly more frequent
are considerably more frequent
are substantially more frequent
are far more extensive
are markedly more frequent
are far more prevalent
are far more persistent
are vastly more frequent
are far more often
are much more frequent
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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