Sentence examples similar to more commonly today from inspiring English sources

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When the number of acetamido groups is more than 50% (more commonly 70 90%) the biopolymer is termed chitin.

However, for genome-wide applications, i.e., the computational inference of transcriptional regulatory networks, more simple representations of DNA-binding specificities, such as position frequency matrices (PFMs) are used more commonly [27] [29].

Pathogenic mutations were reported more commonly (10 20 %) than VUS (1 10 %) in these UK laboratories.

Levels as low as 10 ng ml−1 and more commonly 30 50 ng ml−1 have been shown to have inhibitory effects on growth of neoplastic cells in vitro (Martin and Baxter, 1999; Ewton et al, 2002).

Copied counseling records were found much more commonly (76.1 1, p<0.0001) in the notes for the same patient compared to other patients of the same provider, consistent with copy-paste rather than use of templates as the mechanism of their generation.

Just seven years after Robert Fulton proved the commercial viability of steam-powered ships with his North River Steamboat (more commonly known today as Clermont) in 1807, small wood-burning steamers began to ply the Chesapeake Bay.

AEX-IPF cases occur more commonly in winter and spring, suggesting that some of them might have unidentified infections etiology, even despite extensive microbiological workup [ 3].

This will result in high flows occurring more commonly in late autumn and winter rather than spring, and lower low flows in summer, phenomena that may already be occurring in the Pacific Northwest.

Reporting of sick or dead poultry to authorities was less frequent among lowest SEQ (8/47 [13%]) than highest SEQ (20/49 [37%]; χ 6.6, p = 0.02) where selling poultry in the event of a local outbreak was more commonly reported (21/66 [66%] vs. 10/51 [18%]; χ 27.2, p<0.001).

Shortwave radios, more commonly known today as high-frequency (HF) radios, have long been popular with wandering sailors.

However, the word is more commonly used today to describe people of French background mixed with African ancestry — Creoles of color.

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