Sentence examples for more often referring from inspiring English sources

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The low use of YCYR is likely to have been affected by the low number of young people referred to the site by GPs, who reported more often referring patients only when they presented with high risk behaviours, or as was the case with at least one practice, leaving referral to reception staff.

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Nowadays, the term more often refers to Indians of mixed British and Indian heritage.

Today, such deals are more often referred to as partnerships, as in the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).

The nickname that's stuck is "Kamikaze Kasai though, since the Sochi Games, he is perhaps more often referred to as "The Legend".

More often referred as the "good bank-bad bank" model, the approach can infuriate those with claims against the bad bank.

The pivot now more often referred to as a "rebalancing"—is perhaps the most memorable foreign-policy idea to emerge from Mr Obama's two-term presidency.

Of course, if Kirkland's nickname refers to the West African tribe more often referred to as the Mandinka (which the movie and, uh, movie guy were named after), then I've got this totally wrong.

Although in the United States the term debentures ordinarily refers to relatively long-term unsecured obligations, in other countries it is used to describe any type of corporate obligation, and "bond" more often refers to loans issued by public authorities.

A country policeman named Kurt Janisch (blond, athletic, with a chronically erect penis) flags down a delinquent female motorist (cultivated, attractive, middle-aged) named Gerti, more often referred to as "the woman".

ABOUT an hour into "Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets," Harry (more often referred to as Mr. Potter or the Famous Harry Potter) discovers, much to his amazement, that he can speak the slithery, sibilant language of snakes, which is called Parseltongue.

The remarkable thing is that this beacon of hope, in a country where domestic violence is so prevalent, is a light born from the flash of an improvised explosive device – more often referred to as an IED.

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