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19 Sentences With "more briskly"

How to use more briskly in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "more briskly" and check conjugation/comparative form for "more briskly". Mastering all the usages of "more briskly" from sentence examples published by news publications.

She moved more briskly and met me wearing a black elastic belt over a loose top.
"Rates need to rise more briskly than markets now seem to expect," he said in prepared remarks.
" Lacker said in a speech the Fed "may need to increase more briskly than markets appear to expect.
He has sensibly condensed the original, trimming monologues to create fluid dialogue that moves the story forward more briskly.
But it could keep those distinctive elements and add a few others that make it more consistently compelling and more briskly paced.
Many political experts say the strains of domestic politics have kept Merkel from moving forward more briskly on a slate of European reforms proposed by French President Emmanuel Macron.
"Monetary policy rates are likely to increase, and my view is that they may need to increase more briskly than markets appear to expect, depending on developments as the year unfolds," Lacker said.
The quarterly services survey, or QSS, from the Commerce Department implied consumer spending increased more briskly than the 3.3 percent annualized rate reported last week in its second estimate of gross domestic product.
"Rates need to rise more briskly than markets now seem to expect," Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker, a long-time proponent of tighter monetary policy who is retiring in September, said in prepared remarks.
As he strode towards the mound, far more briskly than his leisurely pace over the event up to that point, he must have been suffering flashbacks to his ill-fated encounter with Rae's Creek 22.26 months earlier.
At AWS Re:invent in November, AWS president Andy Jassy pointed out that a vast majority of data remains in private data centers, but that we can expect that to begin to move more briskly to the public cloud over the next five years.
"Monetary policy rates are likely to increase, and my view is that they may need to increase more briskly than markets appear to expect, depending on developments as the year unfolds," Lacker wrote in a speech that due to a family emergency was delivered in Baltimore by another Richmond Fed official.
In fact, the American-born Ms. Meckler offers one of the shorter, more briskly efficient accounts of "King Lear" in recent times — light on emotional catharsis and patchily acted, perhaps, but cleareyed in its chronicle of Lear's dying fall on the way to a self-awareness that is arrived at far too late.
EDT (1800 GMT) * Yellen to hold press conference By Howard Schneider and Ann Saphir WASHINGTON, Sept 20 (Reuters) - Caught between a lull in U.S. inflation and a stronger global economy, the Federal Reserve is expected on Wednesday to signal whether it will raise interest rates for a third time this year or back off until prices rise more briskly.
155 In the form of an ancient dance, the piece was written to be played more briskly than it has generally come to be performed in its familiar orchestral guise. The conductor Sir Adrian Boult heard Fauré play the piano version several times and noted that he took it at a tempo no slower than crochet=100.Howat (2009), p. 272 Boult commented that the composer's sprightly tempo emphasised that the Pavane was not a piece of German romanticism.
The women were assessed on their strength, stamina, flexibility and balance. They all compared favourably with average fitness levels for women in their age range, but the Scottish country dancers were shown to have more agility, stronger legs and to be able to walk more briskly than people who took part in other forms of exercise. In Scotland, SCD is very common at both urban and rural ceilidh events. These are often informal events and the dancing is unrefined – also being aimed at beginners or at least those with very limited skills – and is restricted primarily to a very small set of well known dances (particularly in urban settings).
Howat, p. 155 The composer described it as "elegant, but not otherwise important."Norton, p. 25 Fauré intended it to be played more briskly than it has generally come to be performed in its more familiar orchestral guise. The conductor Sir Adrian Boult heard Fauré play the piano version several times and noted that he took it at a tempo no slower than 100 quarter notes per minute.Howat, p. 272 Boult commented that the composer's sprightly tempo emphasised that the Pavane was not a piece of German romanticism, and that the text later added was "clearly a piece of light-hearted chaffing between the dancers".
It belonged then to the Duchy of Teschen, a fee of the Kingdom of Bohemia and a part of the Habsburg Monarchy. The village began to develop more briskly at the end of the 18th century, when about 900 people working mainly in agriculture lived there. After 1880 sandstone was exploited; its exploitation lasted until the outbreak of World War I. After Revolutions of 1848 in the Austrian Empire a modern municipal division was introduced in the re-established Austrian Silesia. The village as a municipality was subscribed to the political district of Cieszyn and the legal district of Jablunkov. According to the censuses conducted in 1880, 1890, 1900 and 1910 the population of the municipality grew from 798 in 1880 to 886 in 1910 with the majority being native Polish-speakers (between 98.1% and 100%) accompanied by Czech-speaking (at most 6 or 0.7% in 1910) and German-speaking people (at most 5 or 0.6% in 1910) and in 1910 by 5 people speaking other languages.
An Italian study in 2006 showed that dance has a higher rate of positive outcomes for those suffering with cardiac failure compared to other aerobic exercises like cycling. Speculative reasons for this include dance being a more enjoyable (and therefore more sustainable) exercise.America Heart Association Heart failure patients can waltz their way to healthier heartsHeart Care -February 2007 Waltzing Your Way to a Stronger Heart A study at the Washington University in St. Louis School of Medicine in 2007 showed Argentine tango was better at improving the mobility of Parkinson's disease sufferers than an exercise class; a later study showed similar benefits from Tai chi). A study by Dr Paul Dougall at Strathclyde University in 2010 concentrating on older women found that Scottish country dancers were more agile, have stronger legs and can walk more briskly than people of the same age who took part in exercises such as swimming, walking, golf and keep-fit classes.

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