There may be more Danger of this, than some, even of our well disposd Citizens may imagine.
I have always been of Opinion that America would be in more Danger in the Point of coming to an Accommodation with Great Britain than in any Stage of the War.
Our citizens are in more danger of being seduced by art, than subjugated by arms.
When he asserts that we are "now in more danger of Popery than toward the end of King Charles II.
Or are we now in more danger of France and popery than we were thirty years ago?
He gives his reasons in very plain terms; we are now, it seems, "in more danger of Popery than toward the end of King Charles II.
I promised the colonel--" "Will the children be in more danger than I shall be, Jacob Armitage?
Feeling that there was now no more danger to be apprehended from them, Jacob set off as fast as he could for Lymington.
There's more danger, and I've been thinking we ought to cross over to Helena and go south from there through the mountains, and try to keep in the settlements all the way.
You see, now we are going out on to the prairie, where there is more danger of meeting enemies, and I wouldn't go off alone at all.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "more danger" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.