We have no meanings for "more gregarious" in our records yet.
1 They're generally very nice and somebody a bit more gregarious might enjoy it.
2 For the rest of us, there are other, more gregarious dahlias.
3 Meaghan was the more gregarious of the two, an athlete and honor student.
4 He appears to be more gregarious but less apt at organization than most races.
5 For example, one might be quieter and more withdrawn, and the other more gregarious and social.
6 Ghosts are more gregarious than in the past.
7 The eight-inch and six-inch howitzers were more gregarious .
8 Rodney Allen was unavailable, but Ski talked to Somerville, who was no more gregarious than before.
9 I am far more gregarious in my tastes-thesociety of my fellow-creaturesis absolutely necessary to me.
10 She was the more gregarious of the couple and was quick with jokes and humorous life observations.
11 He is in these climates a much more gregarious animal, and several families live in the same earth.
12 But she is more gregarious herself now, keen to discuss life in Europe and compare it with her own.
13 This method is more frequently employed with the caribou, which are much smaller, and more gregarious than the moose-deer.
14 A smaller group than I might have expected, since Julie had always been the more gregarious of the two of us.
15 Man too, if in his ape-like phase he resembled the other higher apes, is an animal becoming more gregarious and not less.
16 At the core of this deficiency is the culture -Flickr users are simply more gregarious and eager to interact on the web.
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