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"more proximity" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English in certain contexts.
It means a greater closeness or nearness in space, time, or relationship. You can use "more proximity" when talking about physical distance, emotional closeness, or the degree of connection between two things. For example: - Living in the city offers the convenience of having more proximity to shops and restaurants. - The team's success was due to their coach's more proximity to the players, allowing for better communication. - The new layout of the office allows for more proximity between departments, fostering collaboration and efficiency.
Exact(9)
"I have somewhat more proximity to it".
No more proximity to tabloid people, show-business heat and Tina Brown.
"The customer can see an adviser while having a coffee…it is designed to encourage more proximity, more interaction, more personal contact".
At the end of the 1990s, the Socialist government attempted to design a police force that would have more contact with and therefore more proximity to the population, an initiative that was quickly thwarted by the right's rise to power and the resistance on behalf of police hierarchies and unions.
In each case, we have sorted the proximity links according to their weight in descending order and calculated the confusion matrix after including more and more proximity links.
The biomass of fine treebelt root extended into the cropland decreased logarithmically with the distance from the cropland-treebelt interface, which resulted in the smaller soil water content in the cropland with more proximity to the treebelt.
Similar(49)
More discomfiting proximity prompted more negative portrayals, featuring cluttered gambling rooms and murky opium dens (housing addicted white working women).
It turned out they had much more than proximity (they're native Floridians) and religion (both are Jewish) in common.
Some of us have chosen a more immediate proximity, as we use our bodies to confront and disrupt corrupt state practices.
Take That tour the UK in June 2009 Back in 2006, there was no reason to believe Robbie Williams's Close Encounters tour referred to anything more than proximity between an increasingly peculiar star and his public.
The first part of the show is a reunion of sorts, bringing portraits that had been trapped in the corners of the East Gallery into more conversational proximity in the Oval Room.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com