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more focused on vs focused more on

Both "more focused on" and "focused more on" are correct and are commonly used in English. The choice between them depends on the emphasis you'd like to give in the sentence.
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Explained by Miss E.
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Last updated: October 13, 2024 • 11996 views

more focused on

This phrase is correct and commonly used in English.

This phrase is used when you want to emphasize the degree of focus on a particular subject or topic.

Examples:

  • She is more focused on her career than on her personal life.
  • The company is more focused on innovation than on traditional methods.
  • I was more focused on her hands...
  • Right now, my king, I'm more focused on the matter at hand.
  • Parliament and Council should take full advantage of the upcoming chance to make the EIB more focused on poverty reduction.
  • Europe needs to be more competitive, more focused on creating new jobs and less concerned with protecting a social model that hampers employment growth.
  • Actually, right now, Liam is more focused on Vincent than JT.
  • It's more focused on legislation and decision-making than on resolutions that are often very time-consuming and have little practical meaning.
  • Now, that explains the vacation days, but everything we learned about Garrett, she was more focused on her career, not babies.
  • She's more positive, she's more focused on school.
  • I was more focused on her hands, on mine... than on the mailbox...
  • Bet you're more focused on the nurses.
  • His attention was far more focused on the provocatively dressed Miss Teller.
  • We should probably be more focused on Emma right now anyway.
  • They're more focused on the crime than your hair.
  • I was just more focused on what comes after.
  • He's becoming more focused on you, sheriff.
  • Such a policy should be more focused on Africa and South-South migration.
  • Secondly, our priorities should be more focused on the fight against poverty and on sustainable growth.
  • He says he can put in a good word for me, but right now I'm more focused on medicine.
  • It appears that Mrs Hibbert was rather more focused on note making for the Rose Queen.
  • Well, we're a little bit more focused on where he is now.

Alternatives:

  • highly focused on
  • intensely focused on
  • deeply focused on
  • greatly focused on
  • strongly focused on

focused more on

This phrase is correct and commonly used in English.

This phrase is used when you want to emphasize the action of focusing on a particular subject or topic.

Examples:

  • The teacher focused more on grammar than on vocabulary in the lesson.
  • The presentation should be focused more on the benefits for the customers.
  • And as Rafael focused more on work, Jane started to get nervous.
  • The whole time... Should've been focused more on... where I wanted to go.
  • Perhaps if you were focused more on external threats rather than witch hunts, you would have caught this man spying on us in the fields.
  • All of political interactions have to date focused more on foreign policy, economic and trade issues than on social and sustainability matters.
  • Whereas until now, countries' policies have focused more on how to prevent illegal immigrants gaining access to the labour market, from now on, we are tackling the problem at its root.
  • I regret that the discussion has not focused more on the responsibility borne by the firms which outsource production to countries such as China, in this case Mattel.
  • We would like the EU's priorities for the budget to be focused more on the future, increased competitiveness, investments in infrastructure and research, rather than propping up agricultural policy.
  • However, EU support must be changed and become more of an environmental support and focused more on smaller agricultural holdings.
  • We focused more on the really serious energy problems of the future, and we produced products for the company.
  • We have in the past too often neglected Asia and focused more on other regions of the world, but in fact it contains a majority of the world's population.
  • Is it not time we focused more on the qualitative side of the solutions, like Mr Pittella is doing with the structural funds?
  • I do believe our resolution should have focused more on major issues such as terrorism, climate change and the economic strengthening of this partnership, which I hope this summit will go some way towards tackling.
  • The European Commission should, however, have focused more on the successful commencement of resources uptake and reduction of the administrative burden, instead of on a mechanical reduction in payment appropriations.
  • We are prepared to reopen discussions with Member States - even though we have just concluded them - on the existing operational programmes in order to ensure that the European fisheries funds are focused more on these restructuring programmes.
  • The PESCA programme is underfunded and should be focused more on the fishing communities and on those who are actually losing their jobs in the fishing industry.
  • The current state of the process of regional integration is characterised by weak regional institutions, with economic integration focused more on the economic consequences of globalisation and the expansion of regional markets than on strong institutions and the development of common policies.
  • The Presidency's speech focused more on the functioning of the internal market than on the achievement of sustainability goals, and the same applies to the Members' speeches: they all talked about transport; no one mentioned sustainability.
  • Whereas until now, countries' policies have focused more on how to prevent illegal immigrants gaining access to the labour market, from now on, we are tackling the problem at its root by punishing employers who profit from the vulnerability of illegal immigrants.
  • The single market is the most integrated form of the common market, since it is focused more on removing barriers - physical barriers (borders), technical barriers (standards) and fiscal barriers - between Member States.
  • stresses the need for a substantial increase in European resources in this field, and in particular, suggests that Daphne II (2007-13) should be focused more on specific emergencies as they arise in reality and the situation in the various Member States; calls on:

Alternatives:

  • concentrated more on
  • emphasized more on
  • centered more on
  • highlighted more on
  • stressed more on

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