We have no meanings for "more intricate" in our records yet.
1 His playing actually seems to have gotten better-richerand indeed more intricate .
2 No body of men has problems more intricate and exacting and difficult.
3 The watercourses now became more intricate , growing narrower as I rowed southward.
4 Modern technology has allowed video games to grow bigger and more intricate .
5 Most really enjoy the challenge, so the more intricate the chore the better.
6 His fast-stepping dance, displaying more intricate movements, brought on more shouts and applause.
7 The physics of Maskelyne's levitation was much more intricate than what Kellar saw.
8 Newman goes, in his next letter, to a much more intricate subject: i.e.
9 And the more data they have, the more intricate the algorithms can be.
10 But it's the more intricate aspects of these feathers that make them noteworthy.
11 The sequel amplifies the look with more fantastical creatures and more intricate costumes.
12 These specialised cells allowed animals to become much more intricate .
13 Moving beyond the simple multicellularity developed by cyanobacteria, some organisms became far more intricate .
14 Human affairs are in themselves far more intricate and perplexing than molecules and chromosomes.
15 But if we magnify the natural world it only becomes more intricate and excellent.
16 Prior to this, there may also be more eruptions, creating even more intricate structures.
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This collocation consists of: More intricate through the time
More intricate across language varieties