We have no meanings for "more hardline" in our records yet.
1 The government has now been forced to adopt a more hardline approach.
2 The security services are said to take a more hardline view.
3 However there are more hardline Salafi activists in poorer areas.
4 But Sunni ranks are split, with more hardline leaders demanding the ousting of Maliki.
5 He is considered less willing to negotiate with the government, taking a more hardline stance.
6 Maybe he was more hardline than I had thought.
7 Streets were clogged with those sympathetic to the Muslim Brotherhood and more hardline Salafi parties.
8 KPMG said UK regulators were already becoming more hardline on issues like operational resilience at banks.
9 In foreign policy, the Communists are more hardline .
10 Political analysts say he began courting voters with more hardline views after forming the SPD in 2015.
11 It will also have to contend with the Islamist al-Nour party, which takes more hardline religious positions.
12 But there are administrative complications with Labor resolving a more hardline position and then subsequently telegraphing it.
13 The Brotherhood and more hardline Salafi Islamists swept the vote, taking around two thirds of the seats.
14 Yet only time will tell whether Mr Adams can sell the proposals to a more hardline republican constituency.
15 The NRA is often pushed to more extreme positions by smaller groups with even more hardline second-amendment views.
16 Even Hillary Clinton, the Democratic frontrunner, is believed to hold a more hardline stance on Iran than Barack Obama.
Other examples for "more hardline"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: More hardline across language varieties