Example sentences of "significantly [verb] with [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 They do , however , reflect the expectation that expenditure on the Campaign will be significantly reduced with effect from 1994–5 .
2 In the present study , α-tocopherol in the serum but not that in the gastric mucosa significantly decreased with time after indomethacin administration , and , also , the decrease of α-tocopherol in the serum was returned to the normal range by concomitant treatment with SOD and catalase .
3 The importance of the quality of this experience is beginning to emerge from a number of recent studies , which show that differences in language use by adults are significantly associated with variation in their children 's rate of development ( see Wells and Robinson , 1982 , for a review ) .
4 Retrospective analysis of prognostic factors at presentation identified oliguria as the only factor significantly associated with death at three months .
5 The fact that this predictor is significantly associated with death at six weeks in this study and not in others could be caused by the same biases previously discussed or to the choice of a more restrictive time period — that is , 72 hours , for estimating the volume of index bleed .
6 Retractions were sensitive but not specific , and grunting was not significantly associated with hypoxaemia in these newborn infants .
7 We do not believe that cholestasis is an important factor in the increase in laminin despite the significant correlation found with bilirubin and alkaline phosphatase , because alkaline phosphatase activity was not significantly associated with laminin in the multivariate analysis .
8 The location-factor school argued that regional policy was the most important cause of decentralization in the '60s because it was the factor most significantly correlated with change in manufacturing employment , that is , it matched the pattern of relative manufacturing growth most closely .
9 These findings broadly echo those of Gunter , Svennevig , and Wober ( 1986 , pp.98–9 ) , whose study of the 1983 election campaign showed that ‘ objectively measured knowledge was significantly correlated with interest in political discussion programmes both on radio and television , but with only one news-consumption variable — claimed viewing of television news ’ ( italics added ) .
  Next page