Examples of using More than the average in English and their translations into Swedish
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Colloquial
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Official
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Medicine
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Official/political
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Computer
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Programming
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Political
Times more than the average American.
And the money to pay a lot, much more than the average"managery".
Like, more than the average family,?
two people more than the average.
Twenty three times more than the average American.
However, an interest rate is considered to be usurious if it is over 50% more than the average bank rate.
Transport expenditure increased much more than the average in single-parent and elderly households.
seven minutes more than the average recorded in 2011.
Those earning more than the average industrial worker will receive their wage increases in per cent.
Mystery Joker is a classic slot from Play'N Go that brings players far more than the average fruit machine.
This is 5% more than the average nightly price of €56 seen over the previous 12 months.
I have read this report with more than the average level of interest.
This is 1% more than the average nightly price of HK$303 seen over the previous 12 months.
That is, Finnish exports to Russia declined by more than the average for exports from all the EU countries.
which is almost 10% more than the average for the country.
An employee who refuses to work more than the average working time must not suffer as a result;
Completeness: You can charge more than the average price if your watch comes with its original box and papers.
sides means the guitar resonates more than the average acoustic, delivering optimum sonic qualities.
seventy 20 centimeters more than the average contemporary Maya.
Taxation based on the use would mean that for those who drive less than the average the costs would decrease and for those who drive more than the average they would increase.
differences of the labourers, of whom one supplies in a given time the minimum of product only, another the average, a third more than the average.
thousand population- that is, significantly more than the average for the USSR but also smaller than in the Netherlands and Belgium.
those in the Northeast spend 22 percent more than the average, those in the Midwest spend 9 percent above,
in 2006 employment grew three times more than the average over the previous five years, in the last two years over six-and-a-half million new jobs have been created, and another five million are expected by 2009.