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Example sentences for "even more"

  • Even more than at Halle, the institution was a place where professors and students worked to discover truth, uninfluenced by any preconceived notions and unmindful of what older ideas might be upset in the process.

  • Even more, they were the only great national group which had done much to develop commercial training.

  • Even more, citizenship everywhere in the earlier period was a degree to be attained to only after proper education and preliminary military and political training.

  • Their children have neither the tone nor the manner of suppliants; they are as haughty or even more haughty in their entreaties than in their commands, as though they were more certain to be obeyed.

  • But put a woman in similar circumstances between two men, and the results will be even more remarkable; you will be astonished at the skill with which she cheats them both, and makes them laugh at each other.

  • Even more does he wish to please the women; his age, his character, the object he has in view, all increase this desire.

  • One believes that the competitive, the prize-winning spirit, is even more dominant in America than in England.

  • There is another figure of earlier date who seems to have had the same magnetic gift in an even more pre-eminent degree.

  • The mistake made too often by religious idealists is to believe that this sense of worship can only be satisfied by religious and, even more narrowly, by ecclesiastical observance.

  • Even more so, I do assure you, than his ventersome ways, though both belongs to the alteration in him.

  • At that moment she crossed the road, as if to avoid the footsteps that she heard so close behind; and, without looking back, passed on even more rapidly.

  • In those games you cheated much, even more than I did, and we used to finish our play in a quarrel.

  • Even more, the rich and economical Sister Rufa had declared that if money should be lacking she would canvass other towns and beg for alms, with the mere condition that she be paid her expenses for travel and subsistence.

  • Much was hoped for, even more than on the previous day.

  • Your condition may be consistent with a tolerably comfortable life for another fifteen years, or even more.

  • If not, knowledge of the truth is even more important to me.

  • In the Friedrichstrasse there is another place, called the Admiralspalast, which is even more attractive.

  • In English country houses the dearth of bathing appliances must be even more dearthful.

  • Assonance is almost equally common, and is even more strange to our taste.

  • In Sicily, even more than in Magna Graecia, poetry and the arts had a splendid and enduring life.

  • It might be even more so than it is; but it can only be so, if we realise the conditions, the material with which we are working.

  • Pattison is even more severe on Pusey, and charges him with having betrayed a secret which he had confided to him in confession.

  • And what makes the whole situation even more tragic is that it was through a certain transparency of nature that this egotism became apparent to others.

  • Although the planet Jupiter does not present such striking features as Saturn, it is of even more interest to the amateur astronomer, because he can study it with less optical power, and see more of the changes upon its surface.

  • A single needle is not relied upon to secure the direction of the card, the latter being attached to a system of four or even more magnets, all pointing in the same direction.

  • But the heavenly spaces contain nebulae as well as stars; and photography can now be even more successful in picturing them than the stars.

  • But there was a sound of defiance in her voice, and at that moment she had a feeling that she was going to do something more decisively unconventional, even more dangerous, than she had ever yet done.

  • When she looked into the glass and knew that, when she looked into men's eyes and knew it even more definitely, she felt merciless and eternal.

  • The consequence is that the face of the country is suddenly flooded with a quantity of melted snow and rain equivalent to a fall of six or eight inches of the latter, or even more.

  • Peat beds have sometimes a thickness of ten or twelve yards, or even more.

  • Even more deeply, we have gone through a long, dark night of the American spirit.

  • Even more importantly, we advance what in the final analysis government in America is all about.

  • Even more interesting is the case of those esquires who before entering the king's service had been in the household of one of his children, i.

  • Next to Sumner he is the most distinguished member of the club, even more so than Andrew and Wilson; a man with a most enviable record.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "even more" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    bathing suit; even because; even break; even for; even greater; even here; even less; even longer; even now; even said; even should; even they; even thou; even voice; even while; even with; evening paper; evening reception; had succeeded; listened intently; original genius; rectangular shape; small groups; states that; thin strip; while warm