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Meanings of more hellish in English
We have no meanings for "more hellish" in our records yet.
Usage of more hellish in English
1
Her head was shaved bald, giving her an even morehellish aspect.
2
He will imagine some new and morehellish torture to punish me with.
3
Another ridge won and passed-andonly a morehellish hail of bullets beyond it.
4
And the mosquitos is some morehellish than common.
5
Now that I could see it with both eyes, the place looked even morehellish.
6
It looks good, morehellish one might say.
7
Trust me, sir, there is a far morehellish mischief brewing than any man wots of.
8
Life can give nothing further, and it has no morehellish misery than disillusion following upon delight.
9
Your workplace sounds pretty hostile as is, and snitching to the boss may make it even morehellish.
10
Yet nowhere did heathenism descend to deeper degradation; nowhere did it develop blacker vices and commit morehellish crimes.
11
There go the senseless lorries, all packed with music for a morehellish orchestra than you can remotely imagine.
12
The problem, of course, is that in-game cameras have a job even morehellish than that of NHL camera operators.
13
For the moment, however, Gascoigne is heading nowhere morehellish than Tblisi, where England meet Georgia in a World Cup qualifier a week today.
14
Forty years after his arrival in snooker had galvanised the sport with new energy, the twice world champion's existence had become progressively morehellish.
15
She'd been a punk rocker who washed up in Galway with a hell of a singing voice and an even morehellish heroin habit.
16
There's been no morehellish end to an Open than Sanders' infamous short, tentative miss on what the locals call "the amateur's side".