This would strengthen and support our faith indeed, and would make us more able than, for the most part, we are to apply the grace of God to ourselves, and hereafter to give more strong repulses to Satan.
Be not, therefore discouraged--what you have written will do a great deal of good; and could you still trouble yourself with our welfare, no man is more able to give aid to the laboring side.
He is no more able to judge of the good investment of knowledge than of the good investment of money.
Let not the boy then be held up to blame if he is no more able to name the Olympian council than was Tom Sawyer to name the first two disciples chosen.
The readers seem to be no more able to agree in what they like than did the urchins over the pease-porridge in the nursery rhyme: Some like it hot, Some like it cold, Some like it in the pot Nine days old.
He had not been so often in the schoolroom, so often at the luncheon-table, without exchanging now and then a word with herself which had made her feel that he was more akin to her than his relations were, more able to understand.
The seat of empire was removed to a new city, more able, from its position, to withstand the shock which was to come.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "more able" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.