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Meanings of often superior in English
We have no meanings for "often superior" in our records yet.
Usage of often superior in English
1
In fact, the animal is oftensuperior to man in sense perception.
2
In fact, they're oftensuperior to internal combustion engine-powered cars for high-performance motoring.
3
I use local ingredients where possible to support smaller businesses and the quality is oftensuperior.
4
Their education was oftensuperior to that of the coarse and brutal masters who owned them.
5
Men of genius are oftensuperior to what Bacon calls "the wisdom of business."
6
That it gives a dignity which is oftensuperior to power, and commands reverence where pomp and splendor fail.
7
Even when movies have been made, recently, from books that aren't especially worth reading, the books are still oftensuperior.
8
So other than out of misty-eyed sentimentalism, is there any point in sticking to traditional techniques when machines are oftensuperior?
9
His court was formed on the model of Madrid, and displayed an equal and oftensuperior degree of magnificence and state.
10
In strength, in speed, in keenness of scent, in fidelity, blind instinct in the animal is oftensuperior to reason in the man.
11
Findings and conclusions: In studies of traumatically injured people, multiple imputed values are oftensuperior to complete case analyses that might have significant bias.
12
The judgment may be eccentric, but for myself the character parts in Smollett's dramas seem for variety and vividness oftensuperior to those of Fielding.
13
These didn't look so perfect as the more expensive "table" strawberries, but they were oftensuperior in the taste department, bursting with scarlet ripeness.