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more extensive
adjective as in far-reaching, thorough
Strongest matches
Example Sentences
Workers have removed some of the graffiti from the “Day Without an Immigrant” protest, but some was written with a type of spray paint that requires a more extensive — and expensive — removal.
Researchers didn’t really understand what was happening, however, until after they were able to do more extensive testing on the drinking water for the 1,200 surviving homes in Paradise.
Hwang wrote more extensive backstories for his secondary ensembled players, more reasons for the viewer to invest in them as people instead of just numbers.
Instead, state supreme courts have repeatedly held that their state equality provisions can, and sometimes do, provide more extensive safeguards, protecting their residents, as the Supreme Court of Vermont explained, “however the philosophy of the United States Supreme Court may ebb and flow.”
It wants to give police more extensive powers to tackle gangs, and wants to step up co-operation with law enforcement authorities in other countries.
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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
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