We have no meanings for "more cosmopolitan" in our records yet.
1 This has given the city a more cosmopolitan , liberal feel than Riyadh.
2 The Irish and Germans are more cosmopolitan , each in a like degree.
3 Around him was a far more cosmopolitan crowd, increasing every moment in volume.
4 The Briton is daily becoming more cosmopolitan , his outlook more world-wide.
5 That argument can be used cheaply and glibly to make us seem more cosmopolitan .
6 Cape Town is safer and more cosmopolitan than ever before.
7 There was, perhaps, a more cosmopolitan air to the talk.
8 Then the American is more cosmopolitan and less domestic.
9 The American is certainly not the grumbler the Englishman is; he is more cosmopolitan and conciliatory.
10 Madrid is more cosmopolitan , said 22-year-old Maria Craquis.
11 Beyond a more cosmopolitan style of speech, he was singularly like David in person and deportment.
12 Nexus was also much more cosmopolitan than Chiaroscuro.
13 As traders, they enjoyed a more cosmopolitan Christmas.
14 And let's face it, St. Ives is a bit more cosmopolitan than Boscastle-forCornwall, at least.
15 This time, Nigerian producers and singers swapped their Afrobeat roots for more cosmopolitan and glitzy pop threads.
16 Her room had a more cosmopolitan appearance.
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This collocation consists of: More cosmopolitan through the time
More cosmopolitan across language varieties