We have no meanings for "partake more" in our records yet.
1 Oh to partake more and more of that power of His Resurrection!
2 But had I not better partake more fully in their reproach?
3 One thing he would like to partake more in, though, was the company of women.
4 These songs, speaking in general terms, partake more of the character of motifs than of musical compositions.
5 His concertos partake more of the study than of the name they bear, and are valued accordingly.
6 An invitation to a tea-drinking may be less formal and should partake more of the nature of a private note; thus:
7 But it causes the subject to partake more perfectly of a pre-existing form, or it makes the form to extend further.
8 Your questions appear to go beyond the limits of ordinary instruction, and to partake more of the nature of a cross-examination.
9 On a forlorn and weather-beaten coast, the scene is indeed different, but the feelings partake more of horror than of wild delight.
10 No doubt, too, the extensive reading that children and youth now do might well partake more fully of the nature of study.
11 They see more of the divine beauty, wisdom, goodness, and other perfections of God, and partake more largely of the Divine Nature.
12 There was a luminousness in it- acalmbut piercing character, which seemed to partake more of the nature of spirit than of humanity.
13 Thus the grouping of poetic with rhetoric and logic naturally tended to make it partake more and more of the nature of the other two.
14 On further thinking, I recollected how often that wife of Sbietta had teased me in a hundred ways to partake more freely of the sauce.
15 These "mules" are prized if they partake more of the nature of the princely caste, and less valued when nearer to the merghee.
16 We have partaken more largely of the fruit of the forbidden tree.
Other examples for "partake more"
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This collocation consists of: Partake more through the time
Partake more across language varieties