Aún no tenemos significados para "more witty".
1The more brutal they were the more witty she seemed to think them.
2A more witty, a more amusing figure does not exist.
3Mr. Disraeli was the more adroit, the more witty, and the more brilliant in his thrusts.
4There is nothing more witty than your remark on the perpetual youth of composers in Paris.
5He became more witty, more masterful, while the repartee of his adversaries sank to wretched piffle.
6I do not know a purer, more virtuous partner, or a more witty and enlivening man.
7And she proceeded to give an account of the Fallowfeild party at luncheon more witty, perhaps, than veracious.
8As an orator, Seymour was the more persuasive, logical, and candid-VanBuren the more witty, sarcastic, and brilliant.
9These fooleries put the king into such good humour that he was more witty in his speech than ordinary.
10Never had Georges been more witty, more affectionate, more well-bred; he was still the man of the day before.
11He celebrates his expected departure in some verses more witty than moral, in which he addresses our islanders as follows:
12Wine is rather valued as imparting a happy moderate glow, making the thoughts come faster, and the tongue more witty.
13The aristocrat is not merely to be taller than mortal men and stronger and handsomer, he is also to be more witty.
14And this for the simple reason that the aristocrats are not more witty than the poor, but a very great deal less so.
15Good things are said, and there is that kind of happy appreciation which makes the generally silent speak and the clever more witty.
16In fact, the Sun's visual history of Britain's past, present and future is in many ways more witty and perceptive that you would expect.
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More witty a través del tiempo
More witty por variante geográfica