Home
Idioms
Top 1000 Words
Top 5000 Words


Example sentences for "greater variety"

  • The external organs, with their various appendages and integuments, would, by the same general laws, naturally give rise to a greater variety of colour.

  • The dispersal of seeds is effected in a greater variety of ways than are available in the case of any animals.

  • It represents a Gothic Temple, into which the artist, Mr. Robert Cruikshank, has introduced a greater variety of characteristic subject than was ever before compressed into one design.

  • Does it consist in the greater security afforded by a greater variety of parties, against the event of any one party being able to outnumber and oppress the rest?

  • It is, perhaps, as extensively diffused as the use of tobacco; and is certainly indulged in by a greater variety of persons.

  • And truly, when we consider where he has been located for the last few years, in a district which offers a greater variety of game to the sportsman than any other in Great Britain, his moderation becomes matter of legitimate praise.

  • Whether any poet of our country since Shakespeare has exerted a greater variety of powers with less strain and less ostentation.

  • On the contrary, from observing the variety of conduct in different men, we are enabled to form a greater variety of maxims, which still suppose a degree of uniformity and regularity.

  • But in order to throw the argument into a greater variety of lights we shall also insist, though briefly, on this latter topic.

  • I am afraid that, should I multiply words about it, or throw it into a greater variety of lights, it would only become more obscure and intricate.

  • As the one can commonly afford his work a good deal cheaper, so the other can commonly afford his goods somewhat cheaper, than if his stock and attention were both employed about a greater variety of objects.

  • There are perhaps no manufactures, in which the division of labour can be carried further, or in which the machinery employed admits of a greater variety of improvements, than those of which the materials are the coarser metals.

  • The man who employs either his labour or his stock in a greater variety of ways than his situation renders necessary, can never hurt his neighbour by underselling him.

  • Nature indeed furnishes us with the bare Necessaries of Life, but Traffick gives us greater Variety of what is Useful, and at the same time supplies us with every thing that is Convenient and Ornamental.

  • Trifling as the manufacture of buttons may appear, there are few which include a greater variety of operations.

  • Brass is applied to a greater variety of purposes in the arts than copper.

  • And to no verse, as far as I know, is a greater variety of time necessary.

  • Though it enforces not its instructions, yet it furnishes a greater variety.

  • Though it enforce not its instructions, yet it furnishes us with a greater variety.

  • The Sea Dayaks nowadays make a greater variety of shields, copying those of the other tribes with variations of their own.

  • The Klemantans present a greater variety of physical types, being a less homogeneous group.

  • At no place in the world can a greater variety of peculiar people be seen during the winter, with their idiosyncrasies and eccentricities cropping out, for the amusement of some, and the annoyance of others, than at St. Augustine.

  • No part of the world furnishes a greater variety of the finny tribe than this coast, and fisheries are being established in the vicinity.

  • The Tenth Book of Paradise Lost has a greater variety of Persons in it than any other in the whole Poem.

  • The Implex Fable is thought the most perfect; I suppose, because it is more proper to stir up the Passions of the Reader, and to surprize him with a greater Variety of Accidents.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "greater variety" 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:
    brief pause; chief rabbi; climbing plants; for its; greater amount; greater detail; greater distance; greater evil; greater extent; greater length; greater number; greater part; greater pleasure; greater proportion; greater quantity; greater than; greater value; les autres; magazine articles; page from; personal habits; seedling trees; skin diseases; wild rice; would arrive; you really