Sentence examples for more often characterized from inspiring English sources

"more often characterized" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used to describe something that is frequently or commonly labeled or described in a particular way. Example: The city's weather is more often characterized as hot and humid, rather than cold and dry.

Exact(12)

He has been giving speeches on the subject for years, but he has more often characterized it as a group accomplishment rather than his own.

Since Mr. Trimble's bold gamble in November, unionist frustrations have been given a more sympathetic hearing in places like Dublin, Washington, London and Belfast where their resistance in the past was more often characterized as obdurate nay-saying.

The party capped a day of meetings meant to showcase the breadth and durability of the relationship between the United States and Afghanistan — one that is more often characterized by the testy back-and-forth between this administration and the mercurial Afghan leader.

Furthermore, some studies have shown that antisocial individuals with predominantly impulsive behavior and reactive aggression are more often characterized by increased levels of arousal (Hawes et al. 2009; Scarpa et al. 2010).

It is more often characterized by meandering incremental steps designed to make problems less bad rather than "solve" them.

Residents along the route sit out on porches and line sidewalks to wave and snap pictures, surprised to see such a powerful showing of vitality in places more often characterized by loss than gain.

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Similar(48)

The blind flooding of query packets in route discovery more often characterizes the broadcast storm problem, exponentially increases energy consumption of intermediate nodes and congests the entire network.

These diagnoses are often characterized more by symptoms and distress, than by consistent demonstrable tissue abnormalities [ 13, 14], and are often based on the patients' own reports of pain and complaints [ 15, 16], and may be classified as subjective health complaints [ 13, 15, 16].

Individual survival under such severe and abrupt disturbances may often be dictated by chance, more than adaptive trait variation, providing a distinction from the more subtle disturbances that have often characterized cases of contemporary evolution in the wild (Hendry et al. 2008).

There are several such functions and each function is often characterized by more than one parameter.

Moreover, underwater networks are often characterized by more expensive equipment, worse physical characteristics [3], higher mobility, sparser deployments, and different energy regimes.

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