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Example sentences for "more importance"

  • To have perceived this and, what is of more importance, to have done it, and done it with an abstinence from all recriminations however just, constitutes the glorious and imperishable honour of the Roman senate.

  • Of more importance is Thibaut de Champagne, King of Navarre, who is indeed the most important single figure of early French lyrical poetry.

  • The tragedies are indirectly of more importance, but intrinsically much duller reading.

  • That would have been of more importance if the newcomer had not been so much to the southward and westward, rather than behind them.

  • He may be of more importance than I had any idea of," said Ned to himself, "and I wish I knew what was coming next.

  • It was also of more importance to the whole world than any man who heard it could then have imagined.

  • The poems of Villon are rather of more importance.

  • These Anabaptists were not very learned or conspicuous advocates of their opinions; but some of the Italian confessors of Protestantism were of more importance.

  • But it is of more importance to observe, that in this period we find a foundation laid for the great science of international law, the determining authority in questions of right between independent states.

  • In Louisiana it rises to more importance, for that is the region where the tree attains its best.

  • The scarcity of good hardwoods on the Pacific coast gives this ash more importance than it otherwise would have, and the importance which it possesses has been frequently overstated.

  • Under favorable circumstances it grows rapidly and promises to be of more importance as a lumber source in the future than it has been in the past.

  • I will now pass on to a second class, which is even of more importance.

  • But perhaps it is even of more importance to prove that the most highly developed of all languages—namely, the Indo-European group—still bears unmistakable evidence of having passed through this primitive phase.

  • But the issue touching the relation between the polysynthetic and other types of language is of more importance for us, inasmuch as it involves the question whether or not we have here to do with the most primitive type of language.

  • She was evidently of more importance to them than she had been before, and they refrained from offending her.

  • The creature has other matters of more importance to attend to.

  • What could be of more importance to me, baroness, than walking here with you?

  • Of more importance is interference with the peristaltic movements of the stomach, particularly in the pyloric region, where the cancer is most frequently situated.

  • Cachexia is of more importance, but it is to be remembered that ulcer, and even chronic gastritis in rare instances, may be attended by a cachexia indistinguishable from that of cancer.

  • The habit of artificially flattening the back of the head is of more importance.

  • The physical difference is of more importance.

  • The distinction just indicated is of more importance, as illustrative of a general principle, than as a fact affecting the particular point in question.

  • And a goodly country," said Don Quixote; "but will your worship do me the favour of telling me your name, for it strikes me it is of more importance to me to know it than I can tell you.

  • We told him why we hesitated, but he said it was of more importance first to secure the vessel, which could be done with the greatest ease and without any danger, and then we could go for Zoraida.

  • Another instance of the emperor's interference, constitutionally of more importance as directly affecting the rights of the German sovereigns, was in the question of the succession to the principality of Lippe (see LIPPE).

  • The overthrow of Jules Ferry and the danger of war with France made a good understanding with Great Britain of more importance.

  • I tell you he had a ranch in New Mexico, and we will prove it to you, and that ranch was of more importance to him than all the star routes in the United States.

  • In the first place, it is not evidence; and in the second place, which is of more importance, it is not true.

  • The physician who understands the general laws of human health is of more importance to us here than the specialist.

  • Agriculture is of more importance to the nation than industry.

  • The trinkets and buttons of more importance to the savages than the person of the captive.

  • It is just possible that the cartridge belt, or the field glasses, or the buttons on his coat were of more importance to them than George himself.

  • But the panegyrical chants became of more importance.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "more importance" 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:
    long handle; more able; more advantageous; more cheerful; more comprehensive; more convenient; more efficient; more excellent; more expensive; more frequently; more liberal; more likely; more numerous; more particular; more powerful; more practical; more probably; more rapid; more ready; more satisfactory; more seen; more sensible; more sensitive; more value; more worthy; strong coffee