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Example sentences for "more marked"

  • The latter was a common experience, and although not unusual in civil practice, I think it is more marked in these injuries as a result of the more widespread character of the nerve lesion.

  • The symptoms had then become much more marked, consciousness was incomplete, and articulation slow and imperfect.

  • This has long been the belief of the Tongans, and it is possible that Tongan immigrants have impressed their views upon Fijians, since it is more marked in the Lau Islands, where the Tongan influence is strongest.

  • The lack of self-control seems to be more marked in low-born than in chief women.

  • The odour of perspiration is more marked in males than in females, and in the hill people than the coast natives.

  • The movements of the arms were free; there was a marked tremor of both hands, more marked on the right.

  • Pain occurred on passive movements of the legs, which were flaccid; there was a hyperalgesia about Poupart’s ligament, more marked on the left side.

  • Their attention to strangers while not more sincere is more marked.

  • The change is taking place more rapidly among the young than among the adults and is more marked in the city than in the country.

  • In no respect has the influence of the west upon the east been more marked than in the elevation of woman.

  • Paresis extends to the whole of the motor area below the seat of the lesion, but the weakness is more marked on one side of the body.

  • The outline of the head of the humerus in its abnormal position is visible through the skin, and the shortening of the limb is more marked than in the sub-coracoid variety.

  • It affects the side of the face opposite to that of the lesion, and the defective movement is more marked in the lower than in the upper half of the face.

  • The retroversion is more marked in the tibia of the new-born child than in that of the adult, and this appears to have a connection with the permanent bending of the knee during intra-uterine life.

  • The colicky pains preceding and accompanying the stools are a more marked feature of intestinal catarrh; they are absent in enteric fever or have a feeble intensity.

  • Finally, in subacute rheumatism the alterations in the synovial membrane, and especially in the cartilages just described, are likely to be more marked than in the acute form.

  • Complications with eczema and impetigo are very frequent; where they are found the glandular swellings of the neck and below are still more marked than in uncomplicated cases.

  • The beginning of the third period is indicated by a diminution of the evening exacerbation, while the morning remissions become still more marked.

  • This condition presents many points of resemblance to that often seen in delirium tremens, and is said to come on earlier and to be more marked in those who are addicted to the abuse of alcoholic liquors.

  • The protrusion of the abdomen is more marked usually on the right side.

  • The only difference is that the patients are younger in acute forms, the course is more rapid and the wasting away is more marked.

  • This difference is more marked in the lower jaw than in the upper jaw.

  • They may differ from Pterodactyles as widely as the Insectivora among Mammals differ from Bats, but not in a more marked way.

  • Some hours after the operation it usually happens that the spontaneity and reflex irritability of the spines return, though in a feeble degree, and also those of the pedicellariae, in a more marked degree.

  • But it is curious that in many cases the effects of shock appeared to be more marked in the larger than in the smaller segments--the latter, for some time after the operation, contracting much more frequently than the former.

  • In some specimens the latter effect is more marked than it is in others.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "more marked" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    more acquaintance; more active; more akin; more amusing; more and; more blessed; more comfortable; more comprehensive; more delightful; more direct; more exactly; more favourable; more generally; more importance; more inclined; more interested; more just; more precise; more precisely; more probably; more profitable; more real; more recent; more strongly; more truly; other goods