Aún no tenemos significados para "more grandiose".
1But for 27 lucky travellers, access to the plane is more grandiose.
2There were 106 movies about my life, each more grandiose than the last.
3As a rule the smaller the place the more grandiose the appellation bestowed on it.
4The ERC's hall was bigger, its decorations more grandiose, but it was basically the same.
5His leaders had more grandiose projects in view.
6His aspirations grew more grandiose and more expensive.
7This magnificent group of buildings may be called a much enlarged and much more grandiose Trocadéro.
8Those lessons, though, were swiftly lost against the backdrop of more grandiose, militarily conventional ambitions in Iraq.
9His own mother and father had warned him not to get involved in any more grandiose adventures.
10The lines which were used to calm us in our more grandiose and self-conceited moods ran as follows:
11Nowhere, in all music, is grandeur nigher to the dust, and nowhere does the dust reveal more grandiose traits.
12The new genius who was ruling France had in mind something more grandiose than a war with the American Republic.
13From the outset, one senses the strain involved in coming up with more grandiose versions of parallel scenes in the original.
14Each little piece reminds one of England; but the geographical scale is enormously more grandiose, and the effect of majesty proportionately greater.
15Is not the Church of Saint-Denis itself a funeral discourse in stone more grandiose and eloquent than that of the reverend orator?
16It had now become an almost religious memory with her, and through dint of being ceaselessly recalled it grew even more grandiose.
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More grandiose por variante geográfica