Aún no tenemos significados para "more averse".
1Gen. Grant himself is not more averse to oratory than he.
2Management and investors, meanwhile, are becoming more averse to risk.
3He grew more and more averse to society each year.
4Above all, they were proud, and more averse to noisy scenes than women usually are.
5Steinbock, emulating these emasculated but charming men, grew every day more averse to hard work.
6Undoubtedly, the general temper of nations is more averse from war than it was of old.
7I grow every year more averse to stirring from home, and putting myself out of my way.
8I am not more partial to my arm chair, nor more averse to shaving, than of yore.
9You are very justly more averse to Mr. Masters who is a pragmatic fellow, and at best troublesome.
10Companies might also be more averse to taking on debt, said David Spry, research manager at broker FW Holst.
11Whether Lee or his lieutenant was the more averse to posing before the crowd it is difficult to say.
12But things would be better done if people were more averse to having anything to do with leasehold property.
13Investors became more averse to risk and far less tolerant of the lack of up-front profits being delivered by internet stocks.
14The carnage then made among the natives has rendered them more distrustful, and more averse to the inhabitants of the missions.
15No people are more averse to every kind of innovation than seamen, and their prejudices are extremely difficult to be conquered.
16He became gradually more and more averse to going out, and to receiving visitors,-moreindifferent, in fact, to all outward things.
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More averse a través del tiempo
More averse por variante geográfica