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Example sentences for "made more"

  • The game may be made more difficult by each player writing on a third slip of paper a verb or an adjective, these to be collected and redistributed with the nouns and questions.

  • The game will be made more interesting by feints on the part of the player who has to take the ruler, he giving several appearances of taking it before really doing so.

  • Where there are many playing, it is advisable to have two or three who take the part of thrower or Puss (It), in which case there will be two or three balls or bean bags in play at the same time, and the game is made more rapid.

  • The law, passed at the last session of the Congress, granting compensation to certain classes of employees of the Government, should be extended to include all employees of the Government and should be made more liberal in its terms.

  • But the laws themselves need strengthening in more than one important point; they should be made more definite, so that no honest man can be led unwittingly to break them, and so that the real wrongdoer can be readily punished.

  • This experiment is made more instructive by gradually admitting the air again into the exhausted vessel, and at the same time ringing the bell, when the sound becomes gradually louder, until it attains its full power.

  • Page 372] The experiment is made more striking if the marbles are allowed to fall on a lever connected with the detent of a clock alarum, which rings every time a marble falls from one of the rods.

  • Discuss ways in which your township reports could be made more useful.

  • Do you think it should be made more democratic?

  • How your school could be made more beautiful.

  • In each case it is simply a wedge whose end is made more or less acute so as to make it as sharp as possible, while still retaining strength enough to sever the material it is to operate upon.

  • This is, perhaps, made more clear in Fig.

  • The crank or handle of the vice is made more convenient by means of two square holes that fit the end of the screw that actuates the movable jaw.

  • Our relations with that Empire, always cordial, will naturally be made more so by this act.

  • Undoubtedly his previous conquests had been made more easily, for my second talk with Miss Thorn had put my mind at rest as to her having fallen a victim to his fascinations.

  • The fastening may be made more secure by cutting a groove across the inside of the ring for the stirrup to fit in, Fig.

  • The combination may be made more or less complicated, as desired, by connecting the tacks in different ways, and by using a separate battery for the bell and lock.

  • This can be thinned with water to suit and is a good glue, but it can be made more adhesive by the addition of a little sodium arsenate.

  • Defn: To become or be made more humane; to become civilized; to be ameliorated.

  • If the auxillary be emphasized, the command is made more imperative, the promise or that more positive and sure.

  • Magic music, a game in which a person is guided in finding a hidden article, or in doing a specific art required, by music which is made more loud or rapid as he approaches success, and slower as he recedes.

  • Made more solemn by the imposition of hands.

  • His maxim for making a fortune was to use all men ill, but Mead, it has been observed, made more money by the opposite method.

  • For about the first Century nothing made more Noise in the World than Roman Noses, and then not a Word of them till they revived again in Eighty eight.

  • Therefore, in like manner, on the part of the person sinned against, the sin is made more grievous by reason of his position and knowledge.

  • In others we find opposition in respect of perfection and imperfection: wherefore in alterations, more and less are considered to be contraries, as when a thing from being less hot is made more hot (Phys.

  • No, for it can be made more comfortable in its carriage and as well protected from exposure.

  • Gruels can be made more nutritious by the addition of whipped egg, either the white or yolk or both, and the various concentrated food products.

  • This can be made more effective by adding five or ten drops of camphor.

  • It can be made more effective by adding half ounce of cream of tartar to the infusion.

  • Pork is made more wholesome by curing, salting, and smoking.

  • Is it made more tender or tough by dry heat?

  • In most markets, meat is made more tender by allowing it to hang for several days at a temperature near freezing.

  • How might it be made more effective by special treatment on the stage?

  • Could it be made more interesting on the stage by the way of enacting the part of Brother Anthony?

  • There is a touching beauty in her face, made more effective by the deplorable condition to which she is reduced.

  • The point in question at present, and which they must get over, in order to prove the property, is made more difficult by the doubt in which the origin of Clotilda has always been involved.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "made 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:
    apple tree; made alive; made also; made believe; made between; made clear; made his first appearance; made holy; made like; made more; made much; made mustard; made out; made paper; made possible; made public; made reply; made sail; made the; made with; made yeast; making himself; name appears; one years; quarter ounce; you forget