Home
Idioms
Top 1000 Words
Top 5000 Words


Example sentences for "more comprehensive"

  • It can make so much out of its data only because it assumes in them a more comprehensive and a deeper world of thought.

  • So that in this whole business of genera and species, the genus, or more comprehensive, is but a partial conception of what is in the species; and the species but a partial idea of what is to be found in each individual.

  • Such are all propositions wherein the genus is predicated of the species, or more comprehensive of less comprehensive terms.

  • But when a delegation of publishers from Lautier's organization toured European installations during the same period, the members took a more comprehensive look at the Seventh Army's race problems.

  • For a more comprehensive account of the Negro and the Army Air Forces, see Osur, Blacks in the Army Air Forces During World War II.

  • When I sate down to write this Preface, it was my intention to have made it more comprehensive; but, thinking that I ought rather to apologise for detaining the reader so long, I will here conclude.

  • It was, in a more comprehensive view, one modification of that vitiated taste which sacrificed all ease and naturalness of writing and speaking for the sake of display.

  • This abounds with bursts of his elevated spirit; and sketches out a model of public colleges, wherein the teaching should be more comprehensive, more liberal, more accommodated to what he deems the great aim of education than what was in use.

  • Consciousness would accordingly enjoy a more comprehensive scope.

  • Hence it develops not infrequently that our judgments repeatedly have to be changed in proportion as our data are made more and more comprehensive.

  • Ambition is one of those passions that is never to be satisfied.

  • More comprehensive; as a term in classification; as, a genus is superior to a species.

  • Knowledge, a more comprehensive term, signifies the simple apprehension of facts or relations.

  • Defn: A groupe of organisms, either animal or vegetable, related by certain points of resemblance in structure or development, more comprehensive than a genus, because it is usually based on fewer or less pronounced points of likeness.

  • A groupe of organisms, either animal or vegetable, related by certain points of resemblance in structure or development, more comprehensive than a genus, because it is usually based on fewer or less pronounced points of likeness.

  • Knowledge, a more comprehensive term, signifies the simple apprehension of facts or relations.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "more comprehensive" 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:
    more appropriate; more brilliant; more consequence; more correct; more curious; more death; more detailed; more direct; more easily; more expensive; more fortunate; more glorious; more have; more liberal; more nearly; more necessary; more parts; more perfect; more positive; more power; more prudent; more real; more will; one form; when once; would think