We have no meanings for "savor more" in our records yet.
1 They savor more of the East.
2 They employed a variety of means which seemed to me and my friends to savor more of Popish tyranny than of Christian discipline.
3 The profound stillness below was unlike the bold, restless movements of Cap, and it seemed to savor more of the artifices of an enemy.
4 Such a statement would not only be false, but the absolute antipode of Christian Science, and would savor more of heathenism, than of my doctrines.
5 The story of the life of Abraham Lincoln savors more of romance than reality.
6 The whole savors more of the sharp twang of Puritanism than that of the Roman Catholic school.
7 "He savors more of the shops in the Cheap yonder than of Castle or Court."
8 Here is Ann Lee's doctrine revived with a mocking suggestion that savors more of Frances Wright than of its poor, half-crazed author.
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