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Example sentences for "much easier"

  • A conscientious employer once remarked to the writer: "In England it must be much easier; the maid does not look and dress so like your daughter, and you can at least pretend that she doesn't like the same things.

  • The philanthropist still finds his path much easier than do those who are attempting a social morality.

  • It is much easier to adapt the laws to the manners of the people, than to make manners conform to laws.

  • I confess that I have yet seen no sufficient reason for not amending the confederation, though I have weighed the argument with candour; I think it would be much easier to amend it than the new constitution.

  • The framing entirely new systems, is a work that requires vast attention; and it is much easier to guard an old one.

  • Paddy was on the sofa, so as it is much easier to talk to anyone from the same sofa, instead of shouting from another chair, he chose the vacant space beside her.

  • There was a good deal of the pagan about Eileen, for, though she always went to church, and tried to be earnest and attentive, it seemed so much easier to her to worship out in the open air among the upland solitudes of the mountain.

  • In particular, the abundant physical activity of robust health makes it much easier to banish immoderate desires.

  • It is so much easier to read something new than to meditate fruitfully upon what one has read, to pass from picture to picture in a gallery and win no genuine insight from any.

  • Untruthfulness is the great ally of all forms of dishonesty; and strict scruples against lying make it much easier to clear them from the soul.

  • It is much easier to prevent rust than to get it off.

  • It is much easier to avoid trouble than to get out of it.

  • These not only relieve unnecessary strain, but make it much easier to watch the exact progress of the work with the molten metal.

  • This will make the whole operation much easier, because there will be no surrounding cool metal to reduce the temperature of the molten material from the welding rod below the point at which it will join the work.

  • So much easier to break in a window," said Antony with a smile.

  • Why should he try to break a lock when it's so much easier to break a window?

  • Harder to find, yes, but so much easier to look.

  • Yet such is life, that whatever is proposed, it is much easier to find reasons for rejecting than embracing.

  • It is so hard to throw off a tyrant; so much easier to yield, when we have been in the habit of yielding.

  • It is so much easier to preach than to practise.

  • Nor was it much easier to make out the source from whence the hideous clamour proceeded, for the kitchen was dim as a coal cellar, and was further obscured by the foul tobacco smoke the lads were emitting from their short pipes.

  • A much easier way of getting rid of a child,—especially if it be of that convenient age when it is able to walk but not to talk, is to convey it to a strange quarter of the town and there abandon it.

  • It is much easier to recognise error than to find truth; the former lies on the surface, the latter rests in the depths.

  • It is much easier to bind on a wreath than to find a head worthy to wear it.

  • It is so much easier to do what one has done= 45 =before than to do a new thing, that there is a perpetual tendency to a set mode.

  • It is much easier to be critical than to be correct.

  • It is much easier, says Barry, to repeat the character recorded of Phidias, than to investigate the merits of Agasias.

  • And it would make it much easier to talk to you than to any outsider, who would never understand, even if it were possible for me to explain, how hard it is to see which way my duty lies--especially filial.

  • Indeed it was so," cried Rosamond, feeling it much easier to speak to him, and too generous to profess her own innocence and give up Tom.

  • Now that the numbers are smaller, you will find it much easier to take the part that I most earnestly wish should be yours.

  • He believed it much easier to develop a polytechnic institute than a large recreational center, but he doubted whether the former was as useful.

  • It is much easier to turn the latch of a door with the knob than with the spindle when the knob is off.

  • It is much easier to carry a carpet sweeper if you take hold near the sweeper part than it is if you take hold at the end of the handle.

  • It is much easier to erase charcoal drawings than water-color paintings.

  • It is much easier to readjust the reins when the horses are going than to try to stop them.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "much easier" 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:
    each group; long pepper; much attention; much blood; much boiling; much care; much comfort; much damage; much delight; much disturbed; much elongated; much happier; much higher; much love; much opposed; much reason; much regret; much respect; much service; much talk; much the; much value; much valued; much water; never thought; the flesh