It is much soughtafter in Chesapeake Bay, and is a favorite food-fish at Norfolk, Virginia, where it is known as hog-fish.
For its size it is also the gamest, but as it rarely exceeds a foot in length it is not so much sought, generally, as the larger jacks.
This species has been, and is still, much sought after by collectors, and presents many varieties besides those represented.
Guinea and the Senegal, the shell of which, white and fragile, is much sought after by collectors.
European sea; sometimes it attains the length of twelve feet, and, being excellent eating, is much sought after by fishermen.
This food gives a delicious flavour to its flesh, which causes it to be much sought after.
In the South of Europe this species is much sought after, on account of the exquisite flavour which its flesh acquires from living on myrtle and juniper berries.
The extreme delicacy of their flesh causes them to be much sought after by epicures; they are, therefore, captured in every possible way.
In some parts of France it is much sought after by the fowler, its flesh being considered by many superior to that of the Quail and Woodcock.
It is much sought after as an article of food, and is said to be very palatable.
The flesh is considered excellent, on which account it is much sought after by wild-fowl shooters, both on the coast and in the fens.
In the pine forests of Sweden and Norway it is still indigenous, but, being a large and beautiful bird, is much sought after, and is annually receding from the haunts of men.
Pliny says: “Butter is made from milk, and this aliment, so much sought after by barbarous nations, distinguished the rich from the common people.
XXIV-7] These various kinds of fritters were, doubtless, much sought after by the populace, for Cicero speaks of them with profound disdain.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "much sought" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.