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Example sentences for "much smaller"

  • In the latter instance, the unjust compulsion is much smaller, but at the same time the whole expedient is much less productive to the state; and hence the former is the more usual.

  • Yet is there a much smaller proportion of cosmopolite species among the Algae than among the terrestrial cellular plants, such as lichens, mosses, and Hepaticae.

  • If statistics of cancer of the bowels exclusive of rectal cancer were available, they would show, doubtless, a much smaller proportion.

  • In other statistics this percentage is much smaller.

  • Footnote 11: If in this estimate were included infants dying during the first days of life, the percentage would be much smaller.

  • On the Perkins volumes his coroneted initials were plainly added as an afterthought, while a much smaller M.

  • These casks were formerly arranged in three ranks by means of massive scaffolding; they are now set in four ranks, but they rest on much smaller rafters, sustained by uprights, and can be packed closer together.

  • The solution is, however, acid to the indicator phenolphthaleïn, which is much more sensitive to the hydrogen-ion and will show the presence of much smaller concentrations of it than will methyl orange.

  • He had fallen upon (of course) a much smaller boy, and was chasing him down a passage between a double row of forms.

  • We are here concerned with a much smaller matter, namely, any evidence from England which may throw light upon the classes of cases that were called leprous if they were called by a name at all.

  • The ground is much better drained now than formerly; there is less standing water, fewer marshes, a much smaller extent of water-logged soil.

  • Putrid fever, or typhus, was by far the most common disease attended from the new dispensary, although less than at Liverpool, the operations of the charity being on a much smaller scale.

  • It is singular, therefore, that smallpox should have caused a much smaller proportion of the deaths from all causes in London than in the populous provincial cities.

  • The problem is precisely to produce in the bulb such a flame, much smaller in size, but incomparably more powerful.

  • Perhaps the best way is to make the top of the glass tube, for about an inch, of a much smaller diameter.

  • Each of these newspapers is much smaller than Scinteia and is directed at a particular group of readers of level of society.

  • Basal diameter of largest specimen 2/10 of an inch; few, however, attained this size, and perfect larvae were included in much smaller specimens.

  • With ultra-violet light the different metals show much smaller differences in their power of discharging negative electricity than they do with ordinary light.

  • Cupola hemispherical, only one-third as long as the slender inversely conical abdomen, both with irregular, much smaller pores.

  • Pores irregular, roundish, much smaller in the cephalis than in the thorax.

  • Such details may be collected by men actually engaged in any branch of trade, at a much smaller expense of time, than by persons less acquainted with, and less interested in it.

  • A skilful operator can with great exertion do twenty thousand per day, but from ten to fifteen thousand is the usual quantity: children head a much smaller number: varying, of course, with the degree of their skill.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "much smaller" 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:
    much beloved; much blood; much business; much cheaper; much compressed; much cultivated; much delighted; much depends; much dreaded; much enlarged; much higher; much labour; much less; much love; much loved; much meat; much milk; much money; much older; much resembles; much said; much success; much time; much worse; pounds each; terrible noise