Home
Idioms
Top 1000 Words
Top 5000 Words


Example sentences for "more complete"

  • His character would have been still more complete, if his moderation had been equal to his courage; but in this particular we cannot applaud his conduct.

  • He was anxious to proceed to a more complete installation in the interior of Will Tree.

  • Had he expressly ordered the trousseau for the use of shipwrecked folks in difficulties, he could not have made it more complete.

  • At daybreak he was astir, with the intention of proceeding to a more complete installation.

  • But while he was out shooting, Godfrey did not forget to take a more complete survey of the island.

  • It is probable that were the fungi of Spain known the resemblance would be more complete.

  • I] For the North of France no one could have furnished a more complete list, especially of the microscopic forms, than M.

  • True, life will ever remain unfinished, but can we wish to make it more complete than it can be, and can the incompleteness cause us anxiety, when we are sure of its main direction?

  • As to that apparatus," replied Harding, "I do not quite see the use of it; and a more complete supply of clothes or more abundant ammunition would have been more valuable to us as well as to any other castaways!

  • Until a more complete exploration, it might be admitted that the island was uninhabited.

  • Moreover, it gave the latitude and longitude of Tabor Island correctly, which implied that its author had a more complete knowledge of hydrography than could be expected of a common sailor.

  • It is said by some native Georgian scholars that before the tenth century a revision was made of their version, in order to make it more complete.

  • This milk is subjected to a treatment which brings about a more complete emulsification of the fat than is possible in cow's milk, causing it to resemble in character the quality of the mother's milk.

  • While they are thus occupied let us try to get a more complete picture of Miss Fern Fenwick.

  • Protect is more complete than guard or defend; an object may be faithfully guarded or bravely defended in vain, but that which is protected is secure.

  • Mangle is a stronger word than lacerate; lacerate is more superficial, mangle more complete.

  • If I am antecedently assured that the world is good, I shall naturally rejoice on hearing that it is advancing from a less to a more complete state of itself.

  • Progress may be defined as that process by which a thing advances from a less to a more complete state of itself.

  • Assuming the world to be evil in its essential nature, I for my part, if I were consulted in the matter, would certainly give my vote against its being allowed to advance from a less to a more complete state of itself.

  • And now suppose philosophy to have proved that the world, the whole world, is advancing from a less to a more complete state of itself--which as a matter of fact is what the doctrine of evolution claims to have proved.

  • When once we have seen any sin in its true character clearly enough to speak to Him about it, we have gone far to emancipate ourselves from it, and have quickened our consciences towards more complete intolerance of its hideousness.

  • The smallest breach in the feeling of awe and reverence will soon lead to more complete profanation.

  • When suspended in water, the acid and the alkali are more at liberty to act on each other, their union is more complete, and the salt assumes the regular form of crystals during the slow evaporation of its solvent.

  • By burning sulphur in pure oxygen gas, and thus rendering its combustion much more complete.

  • Yet I think it would have rendered the new nomenclature more complete to have methodised the names of the elementary, as well as of the compound bodies, though it could not have been done in the same manner.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "more complete" 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:
    best beloved; more acceptable; more ancient; more attention; more beautiful; more commonly; more complex; more considerable; more economical; more effectual; more elaborate; more formidable; more frequent; more interested; more light; more money; more positive; more practical; more prudent; more quickly; more real; more regular; more strictly; more than; more thorough; who would have thought