We have no meanings for "more copious" in our records yet.
1 The higher the conducting power the more copious were the currents.
2 And here I found him more copious than on the theme of poetry.
3 Only Abyssinia has a more copious rainfall, which makes its plateau more productive.
4 And this came of more copious mercy than if He had forgiven sins without satisfaction.
5 No one is more copious in railing against circumstances.'
6 In one hour we passed a spring called Ain el Akabe, more copious than the former.
7 I never saw finer or more copious hemlocks, many of them large, some old and hoary.
8 Having traced me to my second inn, he was here furnished with a more copious information.
9 Henry feels a fresh rush of blood to his cheeks, much more copious than the last.
10 The more copious flow in the better conductor was exactly counterbalanced by the resistance of the worse.
11 In allusions, in similitudes, though no one known to us is happier, many are more copious than Goethe.
12 In short, the modern military dictionary is more copious than the ancient, and the words at least as poetical.
13 Now, is it not true that the intenser need naturally implies the keener search and the more copious finding?
14 For we have had an opportunity of selecting from a much more copious store of models than he had.
15 Had they been more copious , and extended more to verbal and grammatical illustrations, these Notes never would have appeared.
16 But soon the criticism became less close, the illustration more copious , the tongue more eloquent, and the glance less shy.
Other examples for "more copious"
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This collocation consists of: More copious through the time
More copious across language varieties