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Example sentences for "more ready"

  • But again, he is more ready to believe that the baptism of Christ exists also with us, as we alone assert, than that it does not exist with us, as they alone assert.

  • And, by the same rule, he is more ready to believe what we alone assert, that it is not rightly received with them, than as they alone assert, that it is rightly so received.

  • So that he is more ready to believe what we alone assert, that baptism is rightly received with us, than that it is not rightly so received, since that rests only on their assertion.

  • Crawford could not have wished her more fatigued or more ready to sit down; but he could have wished her sister away.

  • Emma got up on the morrow more disposed for comfort than she had gone to bed, more ready to see alleviations of the evil before her, and to depend on getting tolerably out of it.

  • If anything better can be done to direct the country into a course of general prosperity, no one will be more ready than I to second the plan.

  • And in announcing this sentiment I do but affirm a principle which no nation on earth would be more ready to vindicate at all hazards than the people and Government of Great Britain.

  • Keep thy foot when thou goest to the house of God, and be more ready to hear, than to give the sacrifice of fools; for they consider not that they do evil.

  • Are not our ears open, and our tongue enclosed and shut up, to teach us to be more ready to hear than to speak?

  • And he is like a corrupt, infected, and poisoned fountain, more ready to infect and draw others by his example.

  • I conceive there is nothing the world hath been more abused with, than the notion of zeal, justice, and such like, and there is nothing wherein a Christian is more ready to deceive himself than this.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "more ready" 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:
    good result; more absurd; more advantageous; more beautiful; more blessed; more cards; more careful; more detailed; more effectually; more fortunate; more liable; more literally; more marked; more often; more prudent; more readily; more satisfactory; more scientific; more shall; more simple; more things; more vigorous; more work; shady place; shaped flowers; thus treated