Encara no tenim significats per a "more profuse".
1Some tribes are more profuse in this sort of decoration than others.
2It is more profuse this year than I can ever remember.
3They are more forward and more profuse in their courtesies.
4Their officers asserted the superiority of rank by a more profuse and elegant luxury.
5The Colonel's hospitalities were more profuse than ever, and Mrs. Clive's toilettes more brilliant.
6If existing but getting more profuse, watery, irritating, or producing itching is a very suspicious symptom.
7In addition, the sympathetic vascular innervation in the newborn brain appears more profuse in the forebrain.
8Later the inflammatory swelling becomes more profuse, the animal is fevered, and the symptoms of lameness increased.
9Had he been Althea's own brother, she would not have welcomed him with more profuse demonstrations of delight.
10The more profuse and obsequious a Parliament is, the less likely it is to give offence to the Court.
11Monsieur de Carnavant's refusal vexed the Rougons; but Félicité consoled herself by resolving to make a more profuse display.
12But the fixings were rather more profuse than democracy in its simplicity had led me to suppose its taste appreciated.
13His cough becomes worse, the expectoration gets thicker and more profuse, with night sweats, high fever, and shortness of breath.
14What will produce more profuse perspiration than pilocarpin; or what is a better stimulus to the kidneys than squills or buchu?
15Salem is a duplicate Riet; a small settlement in the river bed; but the water is more plentiful, the vegetation more profuse.
16All records bearing upon the subject are imperfect, and the best of them are more profuse in speculation and surmise than in solid fact.
Aquesta col·locació està formada per:
More profuse a través del temps
More profuse per variant geogràfica