Sentences with phrase «more infrequent use»

Not exact matches

He made life difficult when Torino mounted their infrequent attacks, and even got a little more physical than we're used to seeing him, seeing a yellow card for his trouble.
Anyway, our sex life more or less became very infrequent after three or four months into the marriage and i remember that i used to feel very confused if it was normal or not.
Sadly, the use of simulation in elementary schools and secondary schools is far more infrequent and unorganized than it could, and should, be.
I can do research on the internet far more effeciently than I can in a library and find that regardless of infrequent use my reading vastly increased when I started reading on electronic devices 13 years ago.
If you use your vehicle to commute on I - 27 every day, you may pay more than another resident driver who only uses their car for infrequent trips to a Lubbock Western Little League game once a week.
Taking on large groups of the undead is never a good idea, as the playable character is pretty frail and ammunition for the infrequent firearms is scarce, meaning players will mostly be using melee weapons (now with two new weapons including the longer - ranged shovel and damaging nail bat) to defend themselves, which aren't very good at taking on more than two or three at a time.
If you use your vehicle to commute on I - 27 every day, you may pay more than another resident driver who only uses their car for infrequent trips to a Lubbock Western Little League game once a week.
Repeat use of ECs was infrequent, a finding similar to that in a British study, in which only 4 % of women used ECs 3 or more times in a year.22 Improving access to reproductive choices for women in rural and remote communities was a key reason for the BC initiative, and our findings suggest that EC prescriptions increased substantially in those areas.
With respect to frequency, Gil, Vega, and Biafora (1998) found that White non-Hispanics and U.S. - born Hispanics with infrequent communication within their family were more likely to initiate drug use.
Kavanagh39 reported the median proportion of high EE families in their meta - analysis as 54 % with a range from 23 % to 77 %, whereas figures are typically lower than 40 % in staff - patient studies.12, 23,24,27,28,40 — 42 It may be the case that psychiatric staff have both more experience and training in managing patients» problems than relatives which may be protective factors against the development of high EE.43 In support of this hypothesis, an early study which involved interviewing nurses about how they cope with patients» symptoms of schizophrenia found that more experienced senior staff used a greater number and range of coping strategies than less experienced staff.43 High EE ratings in staff - patient studies are also almost exclusively based on the presence of critical comments with infrequent hostility and very little evidence of EOI.
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