Sentences with more
Mo·ré
M m - More and more people are surviving heart attacks.
- As the level of work increased from light to heavy, workers ate more.
- But business succession is more than just replacement of people.
- The Bullet 580 is the world's largest airship, taking more than six hours to inflate; it will provide cost-effective near-space access to scientists.
- Employees may face increasing pressure to take on more of their own medical costs in retirement. [+ of]
- The Afghan authorities say the airport had been closed for more than a year.
- But do you know more of the cowboy book of etiquette?
- Business teamwork allows for more productivity in a company and ensures successful completion of projects.
- Prison conditions have become more brutal.
- The exhibition at Boston's Museum of Fine Arts is more a production than it is a museum display.
- But if you focus more on the health of your immune system, rather than the duration of an illness, you'll find a big difference in your health.
- More is often considered to be the comparative form of much and , many.
- When we are tired, tense, depressed or unwell, we feel pain much more.
- Things might have been different if I'd talked a bit more.
- This train would stop twice more in the suburbs before rolling southeast toward Munich.
- They needed more time to consider whether to hold an inquiry.
- We stayed in Danville two more days.
- I told him the truth. No more, no less.
- Europe's economies have converged in several areas. More interestingly, there has been convergence in economic growth rates.
- He has more than she has
- No more bananas
- A more believable story
- I'll look at it once more
- more of us are going
- more can be said
- more satisfying, more intensely