We have no meanings for "more barbaric" in our records yet.
1 They are used to seeing much more barbaric treatment, the minutes record him saying.
2 One-Eye went south and made very small headway against the more barbaric tribes there.
3 Few places, if any, offer a more barbaric display of contrasts to the eye.
4 Instead we got more barbaric lockdowns, more devastation for people.
5 The farther the group progressed, the more barbaric and the more sumptuous became the decorations.
6 Since then Vardaman's rhetoric had only grown more barbaric .
7 As the opposition became more desperate, so the Great Chief's countermeasures became more ruthless-andmore barbaric.
8 Is there anything more barbaric in the annals of Indian warfare, than the narrative of the Pequod Indians?
9 Spanish procedure was even more barbaric .
10 Because the De Sautys are scientifically virtuous, shall there be no more barbaric cakes and ale for us?
11 On neighbouring Eigg, where I spent my childhood, the Massacre Cave takes you back to a more barbaric age.
12 That is hardly surprising considering that faith probably had not encountered a more barbaric age than that one before.
13 Allow me to remark, that seems a far more barbaric trait of manners than the most barbarous of ours.
14 A barbaric version of the more barbaric parts of the Bible supplied him with his only record of human society.
15 One or two of the more barbaric had made neat headdresses of white clay plastered in the form of a skull-cap.
16 But Rome still retained the barbaric element of slavery in her bosom, and had conquered more barbaric nations than she had assimilated.
Other examples for "more barbaric"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: More barbaric through the time
More barbaric across language varieties