We have no meanings for "more emphatic" in our records yet.
1 Burke was more emphatic in his opposition to the motion than Pitt.
2 The worse he was, the more emphatic is the exhortation to persistence.
3 And since taking office as president, he has been even more emphatic .
4 And yet the present might have seemed more emphatic and more poignant.
5 In his public utterances he was more emphatic , more caustic of tongue.
6 I even asked Tugendheim, and he was more emphatic than the rest.
7 But the language seems rather more emphatic than such danger would warrant.
8 Her absence is no more emphatic in those places than anywhere else.
9 Had I known it my suggestion would have been much more emphatic .
10 Her voice was fuller and more emphatic as she uttered this word.
11 Nor was anyone more emphatic on this point than Mrs. Rasselyer-Brown herself.
12 He regretted that he had not been more emphatic about those cuffs.
13 Do we not use more emphatic words than these in our self-depreciation?
14 Indeed, the German's voice came nearer every instant, nearer and more emphatic .
15 Could anything be more emphatic than the appeal of electricity for attention?
16 The Reinhardt Committee was even more emphatic on the topic of child labor.
Other examples for "more emphatic"
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This collocation consists of: More emphatic through the time
More emphatic across language varieties