Home
Idioms
Top 1000 Words
Top 5000 Words


Example sentences for "more difficult"

  • The productiveness of an employment supposes, also, that it is not carried on at the cost of other employments which it is more difficult to do without.

  • He finds it more difficult to borrow and is obliged to pay a higher rate of interest.

  • The human personality and identity are more difficult to characterize.

  • No longer dealing directly with the object, or intended action, but with its representation, makes it more difficult to share with others experiences pertinent to the object.

  • The stupor took him once more, but his breathing became more and more difficult.

  • But you have to perform a very different, and a more difficult duty.

  • In Europe, the absence of local public spirit is a frequent subject of regret to those who are in power; every one agrees that there is no surer guarantee of order and tranquillity, and yet nothing is more difficult to create.

  • When once the Americans have taken up an idea, whether it be well or ill-founded, nothing is more difficult than to eradicate it from their minds.

  • We are liable to frequent errors in the research of those facts which exercise a serious influence upon the fate of mankind, since nothing is more difficult than to appreciate their real value.

  • I do not hear that the consent of the maidens is more difficult to obtain than formerly.

  • In the present state of the world it is more difficult to do it than it is to be written down as one who loves his fellow-men.

  • It is more difficult to get acquainted with Herbert than with an entire stranger, for I have my prepossessions about him, and do not find him in so many places where I expect to find him.

  • It is probable that there is no point of duty whereon conscientious persons differ more in opinion, or where they find it more difficult to form discriminating and decided views, than on the matter of charity.

  • But in most cases, it is more difficult to systematize the hours of each day, than it is to secure some regular division of the week.

  • This is the reason why soups are deemed bad for weak stomachs; as this residuum is more difficult of digestion than ordinary food.

  • The greater virtue that is about a more difficult good is opposed directly to the sin which is about a more difficult evil.

  • But it is a less grievous sin to fail in what is more difficult, than in what is less difficult.

  • Their partition of the next world will be more difficult, if it be divided only into two parts, according to the protestant faith.

  • It will be more difficult, if we lose this instrument, to recover what is good in it, than to correct what is bad, after we shall have adopted it.

  • It is more difficult, and also more extended than either of the preceding, but extremely well worth attention.

  • The second is of a more difficult character, involving technic up to the eighth or ninth grade, and requiring more experience and brilliant capacity.

  • Not only are the marks wanting, but the bars confuse the eye and make it more difficult to find the real point where the ideas begin and end.

  • His subsequent disappearance, leaving nothing behind but an empty piano case, it might be more difficult to account for.

  • Greatly comforted by the exploits of the morning, the Prince turned towards the Princess's ante-room, bent on a more difficult enterprise.

  • The operation of more complex mechanisms, such as automobiles, seems to be more difficult, because the operator has more different kinds of things to do.

  • The notions of the rights of groups in man are infinitely more complicated and more difficult to understand.

  • The question of sexual relations during pregnancy is more difficult, on account of its long duration.

  • What is more difficult is the definition of what should be understood under the term of humanity, capable of being socialized and cultivated.

  • In no domain is it more difficult to combine harmoniously the welfare of the community with that of the individual, and this is why questions of right in sexual matters are among the most difficult to solve.

  • In women the results of gonorrhea are, if possible, still worse than in men, because it is more difficult to cure.

  • The very smoothness of the water made the presence of ice a more difficult matter to detect.

  • But his second problem--the problem of developing wisdom--is more difficult; and he must grapple with it without any aid from books.

  • But the greater freedom of romance is attended by a more difficult responsibility.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "more difficult" 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:
    leave them; more careful; more commonly; more considerable; more correctly; more delightful; more effective; more favorable; more generous; more happy; more importance; more intimate; more readily; more ready; more rows; more serious; more severe; more slave; more species; more strongly; more than; more time; more truly; more useful; people whom; rest assured