Besides these ancient landmarks, there is much else pleasing in Mildenhall.
Much else there is in Rye to tempt one to linger, but the sun is setting and we are off on the fine level road to Folkestone.
In this, as in much else, I fear I have betrayed my trust and proved an unprofitable servant--if so may God forgive me.
Yet, perhaps, in that, as in so much else, Richard put a constraint upon himself, obeying conscience rather than inclination.
But he kept his amusement, as so much else, to himself.
And this, as so much else, Julius March noted duly in his diary.
This hypothetical bone was therefore held in great veneration, and many anatomists sought to discover it; but Vesalius, revealing so much else, did not find it.
In this theory, as in so much else, Gilbert stood violently opposed to Shaw.
To his friendship with Maurice Baring Gilbert owed their being able to make the first of these journeys as well as much else.
So much woodwork remains identical; so much else is not identical.
With the advent of the Bourbons the salaried officials found a change in this as in so much else.
It devoted itself wholly to the familiars who, in this as in so much else, were the leading source of trouble.
In this, as in so much else, the Catalans were especially intractable.
Like so much else therein, it may have its roots in the folk and hero tales which underlie the romances.
Much else he says, and on the morrow Perceval and his sister ride forth.
The change may be the result of accident as is so much else in this marvellous legend, but it required a man of genius to turn the accident to such account.
The Romans in this, as in much else, were borrowers rather than producers.
However men, as Cavaliers or Roundheads, Lancastrians or Yorkists, priests or presbyters, differed from each other in much else, all agreed in this recognition of the folly of not taking better care of the steed they all knew so well.
I just hooted, because there wasn't much else he could do.
In France the distinction seems to have been less rigidly defined, and the matter probably was left, like so much else, to the discretion of the inquisitors.
For the source of this, as of so much else, we must look to the Roman law.
The affront then that Rousseau puts upon humility at the very opening of his “Confessions” has like so much else in his life and writings a symbolical value.
Like so much else in this movement it is an attempt to give to a grave psychic weakness the prestige of strength--unless indeed one conceives the superior personality to be the one that lacks a centre and principle of control.
His chapter on the “Dangerous Prevalence of Imagination” in “Rasselas” not only gives the key to that work but to much else in his writings.
This fact stands recorded, quite incidentally, in a certain Discourse on Epitaphs, huddled into the present Bag, among so much else; of which Essay the learning and curious penetration are more to be approved of than the spirit.
Of a truth, were your Schoolmaster at his post, and worth anything when there, this, with so much else, would be reformed.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "much else" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.