Stricter Verification Rules Are Coming To Nj Skip The Games

Yahoo: Indiana House backs bill with stricter verification for SNAP, Medicaid eligibility

MSN: LPG cylinder delivery now requires OTP as oil companies introduce new verification rules

OTP Verification Now Compulsory For LPG Cylinder Delivery Under New Oil Company Guidelines: India’s cooking gas distribution system is witnessing stricter monitoring after the government instructed ...

LPG cylinder delivery now requires OTP as oil companies introduce new verification rules

WTHR: Indiana legislators back bill requiring stricter verification for SNAP toward end of 2026 session

Indiana legislators back bill requiring stricter verification for SNAP toward end of 2026 session To stream 13 WTHR on your phone, you need the 13 WTHR app.

Indiana legislators back bill requiring stricter verification for SNAP toward end of 2026 session

Hey, I have surfed a bit and I know that 'stricter' is preferred but is it all right to use 'more strict'?

Hi I heard "more strict" the other day and it sounded a little odd. The rule goes that if you have a single syllable adjective, then add "er". As "strict" fits that description, I'd go with "stricter". That, of course, is not to say that in some parts of the US, Canada, or even the UK, "more strict" is being used and considered "natural".

Grammatically speaking, the word 'stricter' means 'more strict'! No one (outside a standard language exam perhaps) is going to call saying 'more strict' incorrect. Grammatically or otherwise. It is not a mistake, and it is not dialectal. It is an exception to the rule.

Help me check 2 multi choice questions: 1. Of my parents, my father is _____. A. the stricter B. the strictest C. stricter D. strict 2. He worked...

Note: in the stricter sense, an oxymoron always contains only seemingly contradictory terms, the deeper meaning always being logical. ------------------ A palindrome is simply a word, phrase or sentence that sounds the same whether you read it from beginning to end or from end to beginning (whether left to right or right to left).