We have no meanings for "more prejudicial" in our records yet.
1 There cannot, perhaps, be imagined a combination more prejudicial to taste than this.
2 But in America nothing seems to be more prejudicial to society than these virtues.
3 The second result is still more prejudicial and perilous.
4 The weakness of over-zealous friends is often more prejudicial than the most violent efforts of professed enemies.
5 Nothing is more prejudicial to the great interests of a nation than an unsettled and varying policy.
6 I know no excess more prejudicial to me, nor more to be avoided in this my declining age.
7 But indolence, negligence and delay in little duties to be fulfilled have been more prejudicial to me than great vices.
8 They are a numerous and loquacious body: their hatred would be more prejudicial than their friendship can be advantageous to you.
9 In that he is right; a vain attempt at flight would be much more prejudicial to him than to yield himself without opposition.
10 Nothing is more prejudicial to democracy than its outward forms of behavior: many men would willingly endure its vices, who cannot support its manners.
11 Nothing could be well more prejudicial to his race, than this extravagant theory; which, as we shall prove, has become the source of innumerable evils.
12 "What could I have done more prejudicial to you?" he cried, not a little irritated.
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: More prejudicial across language varieties