We have no meanings for "necessarily better" in our records yet.
1 Goldman's main assumption is that bigger isn't necessarily better in retail banking.
2 The quality of Widtsoe's understanding proves that newer is not necessarily better .
3 By the end, many characters will be wiser, but not necessarily better off.
4 Neither is there evidence that bigger universities are necessarily better .
5 Not that the new is necessarily better than the old.
6 Not all of these alternatives are necessarily better or feasible.
7 Warmer-andthus faster - is n't necessarily better , though: longer rest times will allow for better flavor development.
8 The idea here is this, new, not necessarily better .
9 But the research generally suggests more is not necessarily better and that quality is what matters.
10 Indeed, although Murali certainly became a different proposition when he had it, he was not necessarily better .
11 Not that the art is necessarily better , though the galleries seem to be trying harder this year.
12 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom offers more dinosaurs than ever before - but is more crowded necessarily better ?
13 Which is not necessarily better , Elise sighed.
14 Three legs aren't necessarily better than one.
15 But as Small was careful to point out, more brain activity is not necessarily better brain activity.
16 Who's to say that democracy and independent judiciaries are necessarily better than African social systems that were erased?
Other examples for "necessarily better"
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This collocation consists of: Necessarily better through the time
Necessarily better across language varieties