Examples of using To be a bit more 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
It does though- you just need to be a bit more explicit when it comes to using it.
I have just found ubuntu to be a bit more elegant.
I did, but the pesky things seem to be a bit more tenacious this time around.
One needs to be open to try new things and try to be a bit more spontaneous.
You tell me that the other girls will stop being mean if I just try to be a bit more like them.
However, if you would like to be a bit more specific about what you're looking for,
as a relationship progresses tailor your gifts to be a bit more individual to the person you're dating.
have a go at it, even if it is just understanding the machinery and trying to be a bit more hands-on.
particularly the new historic context that came with Statistics Canada's revisions, the economy appears to be a bit more resilient than previously thought,” DePratto wrote in a report.
Nevertheless I believe that having regard to current spending we can well afford to be a bit more ambitious, so I put it to you that in the coming Framework Programme the amount should be increased to 15% and, of course, I welcome your views on this as well.
Maybe my biggest appeal to you- not only about coming back to Parliament- would also be to be a bit more critical of governments when they fail to live up to their commitments because,
Maybe women I'm attracted to are a bit more discerning, that could be true,
Nice to be a bit more complicated.
We want to be a bit more open.
You're gonna have to be a bit more specific.
I think you need to be a bit more clear.
Therefore the questions tend to be a bit more difficult.
You're gonna have to be a bit more specific there.
And, Maggie, do try to be a bit more outgoing.
TimeTracker is a Firefox extension that can help you to be a bit more productive.