Sentence for more | Use more in a sentence

More example sentence. The sentences below are ordered by length from shorter and easier to longer and more complex. They use more in a sentence, providing visitors a sentence for more.

  • He howls no more. (10)
  • He would not have to come here any more! (8)
  • He has heard more of me! (10)
  • Are you going to play any more? (8)
  • A little more precision, please. (8)
  • Certainly I am much more in awe of him. (10)
  • Now, Rhoda, you know a little more of me. (10)
  • She produced more effect than was visible. (10)
  • But Andrew was preparing one more mighty still. (10)
  • She hardly wished to have more leisure for them. (4)
  • Never was expedition undertaken more recklessly. (19)
  • He resolved that he would meet his fate more manly. (1)
  • Generous himself, he leaned to the more generous view. (10)
  • I will heap no more clumsy irony on it: I can pity it. (10)
  • A little more and we shall have a mad dog in the fellow. (10)
  • If you want more money till you get a place, let me know. (8)
  • They had a great deal more talk that came to the same end. (9)
  • Before he bought his own ticket he appealed once more to Dan. (9)
  • The charm was now more human, though scarcely less powerful. (10)
  • This business might produce a thousand pounds a-year and more. (10)
  • Sleep was no more than the passage through the arch of a canal. (10)
  • They made him hesitate more than once as to what he ought to do. (18)
  • The higher the Comedy, the more prominent the part they enjoy in it. (10)
  • You like me; you might love me; but to dare, Tasks more than courage. (10)
  • She bobbed her head, hardly more than a trifle pleased, one might say. (10)
  • She had come out of her dream now, was playing at make-believe no more. (8)
  • After pausing on this point a considerable while, she once more continued to read. (4)
  • Greeley reckoned up a hundred or more newspapers that had died in New York before 1850. (16)
  • Gardens were in front of the houses; or, to speak more correctly, strips of garden walks. (22)
  • Had the spirit of Washington appeared in his path, Arnold could not have been more abject. (18)
  • You must write again very soon, and praise him a great deal more than you did in your last. (4)
  • It appears that of a certain kind of impropriety it is free to give us all it will, and more. (9)
  • She threaded two more turnings, and from the last corner he saw her enter her block of flats. (8)
  • It was something besides the river that made the air so much more sufferable than it had been. (9)
  • But a much more animated colloquy was taking place aloft, where Lucy and Mrs. Berry sat alone. (10)
  • Mrs. Maynard watched her a while in expectation that she would say more, but she did not speak. (9)
  • No case presents a more complete confusion of the individual and his work than that of an actor. (16)
  • She had looked on it many times, and looked on it still, without seeing more than the old sorrow. (10)
  • He did not seem aware that Mrs. Milray was leaving the affair more and more to him. (9)
  • And I think there are manifest signs that it is more and more so commending itself. (14)
  • And we agreed it would be best to have the harp, for it seems to amuse her more than the piano-forte. (4)
  • He had done more than enough for me, but he had done only what he was always willing to do for others. (9)
  • Clara could reunite him, turn him once more into a whole and an animated man; and she might be willing. (10)
  • All Noyon is blotted out for me by these superior memories; and I do not care to say more about the place. (2)
  • The going to her happiness seemed more like going to something fatal until she reached the Lago Maggiore. (10)
  • Believe me the single word of Langford is not of such potent intelligence as to supersede the necessity of more. (4)
  • Moreover, to touch and kindle the mind through laughter, demands more than sprightliness, a most subtle delicacy. (10)
  • Once more the novel begins to rise to its higher function, and to teach that men are somehow masters of their fate. (9)
  • She bowed, smiled inscrutably once more, touched the Arab with her whip, and started, Toddles trotting at her side. (8)
  • She vaguely perceived that his paint was something more than business to him; it was a sentiment, almost a passion. (9)
  • A little more, and she saw the white weir-piles shining, and the grey roller just beginning to glisten to the moon. (10)
  • It must be allowed him that in prose as well he had the inventive gift, but he had it in verse far more importantly. (9)
  • Field and line officers gathered in groups and spoke more learnedly of what they apprehended with no greater clearness. (1)
  • Yes, she must have accomplished her purpose well; but she would show him and the others something still more wonderful. (5)
  • We follow many, more we lead, And you who sadly turf us, Believe not that all living seed Must flower above the surface. (10)
  • She saw him move to follow her, but this time she did not linger, and it may be inferred that she wished to hear no more. (10)
  • When she had ridden away, looking back until she turned the corner, he tried to lure the two dogs once more to their pose. (8)
  • The honour was readily granted, and he then departed, to make himself still more interesting, in the midst of a heavy rain. (4)
  • This address, accompanied by a commanding elevation of the dexter hand, seemed to excite Mr. Raikes far more than Old Tom. (10)
  • Looked at in this light, the pomps of the wedding festival on the 23d of last month may be something more than a mere show. (14)
  • More than one tumult of outcries had to be stilled before Merthyr gathered any notion of the designs of the persons present. (10)
  • So stood she awhile In the gloom of the terror afield, And the silence about her smile Said more than of tongue is revealed. (10)
  • Even later in the morning, when she was cooler and he had come to speak, more than her own strength was needed to resist him. (10)
  • The aroma of Precedent was strong; Shelton swerved his lance, and once more settled down to complete the purchase of his wife. (8)
  • The only writer of any authority after Ptolemy was Boethius, and he did more to confuse the subject of music than to explain it. (3)
  • Berries were few, except the pink spindle one, so far the most beautiful, of which there were more than Earth generally vouchsafes. (8)
  • Much more likely it is because there are so few people really poor that the whiners are not enough to keep each other in countenance. (2)
  • Naturally she did not go fast through the dark passages, where the game of the fan was once more played out, and with accompaniments. (10)
  • He looked at her in surprise that incensed her still more, and rendered her incapable of regarding the pain with which he answered her. (9)
  • The dear Colonel rallied his spirits tolerably till just at last; but Darcy seemed to feel it most acutely, more, I think, than last year. (4)
  • But the man, realizing more clearly than she the indirect penalties which his situation inevitably imposed, gave no further thought to the abstract question of justice. (13)

Also see sentences for: morbid, moreover.

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