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"in order of difficulty" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It is used to refer to a list or set of items where each item is increasingly more difficult than the previous one. For example, "These math problems are arranged in order of difficulty, so start with the first one and work your way up to the harder ones."
Exact(19)
A year's worth of favorite recipes are here, in order of difficulty.
Then, in order of difficulty, come orange, green, red and blue, the latter for the elite.
The ability to partition problems and to deal with parts in order of difficulty proves helpful.
To that end, in 2015 they asked two hundred people, ranging in age from eighteen to eighty-three, to rank ten magic spells in order of difficulty.
The MAT consists of 100 analogies arranged in order of difficulty, and you are allowed fifty minutes to work through the test.
Another method, called bookmark, involves ranking test questions in order of difficulty and having an educator mark the question that could reasonably be expected to divide the proficient students from the non-proficient.
Similar(41)
The report sections are selected in order of perceived difficulty.
Motor learning influenced performance among subjects who received the MTT in order of increasing difficulty.
Listed in order of increasing difficulty and uncertainty, they are: The unexpected success that is gratefully received but rarely dissected to see why it occurred.
For subjects who received the MTT in order of increasing difficulty, 62% in both age groups performed all eight tasks without any Errors in the motor components.
In order of increasing difficulty, the courses offered are Mathematical Studies SL, Mathematics SL and HL, and Further Mathematics SL and HL.
More suggestions(16)
in case of difficulty
in order of importance
in term of difficulty
in degree of difficulty
in order of preference
in time of difficulty
in level of difficulty
in order of Disappearance
in order of age
in order of merit
in order of seniority
in order of risk
in order of sensitivity
in spite of difficulty
according to the difficulty
depending on difficulty
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com