Sentence examples for more drastic for from inspiring English sources

Exact(11)

Despite all three antibody fragments underwent biotinylation, the gel shift effect was more drastic for rC8scFv at approximately 3 4 kDa difference in comparison to rA4scFv and rG12scFv.

The difference is even more drastic for smaller feature sets.

The plot is very similar to that of Figure 2a: absolute values of averages of all three indices for the same d Φ/d t are statistically smaller during the most recent 10 years (2005 −2014) than the previous 40 years (1965 −2004) when d Φ/d t<104 (μV/m) 2/3 that covers the majority of hours, and this difference is more drastic for smaller d Φ/d t values.

And according to the poll, more than half of Sikh children faced bullying in schools, with rates even more drastic for those wearing turbans.

Nevertheless, the reductions in persistence are considerably more drastic for adult movement.

The difference between PACT and SACT was even more drastic for MB.

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Similar(49)

There has been a significant segment of the student movement that has been pushing for more drastic action for a while.

Jim Killock, executive director of the Open Rights Group, said: "Blocking The Pirate Bay is pointless and dangerous.It will fuel calls for further, wider and even more drastic calls for Internet censorship of many kinds, from pornography to extremism.

"It will fuel calls for further, wider and even more drastic calls for internet censorship of many kinds, from pornography to extremism," he said.

Authoritarian regimes may take more drastic decisions for or against social spending than democratic regimes, due to the absence of "veto points" characterised by Immergut (1990) or "veto players" postulated by Tsebelis (2002), provided by different political systems to interest groups, not allowing them to gain veto power to block political reforms.

On the other hand, authoritarian regimes may take more drastic decisions for or against social spending than in the case of democratic regimes, due to the absence of "veto points" characterised by Immergut (1990) or "veto players" postulated by Tsebelis (2002), provided by different political systems to interest groups by not allowing them to gain veto power to block political reforms.

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