We have no meanings for "adhere more" in our records yet.
1 As a rule the white specimens adhere more nearly to the primitive type, and are generally over 8 lb.
2 To oppose the wishes of a determined man has the effect of making him adhere more closely to them.
3 This second heating of the composition in the bath toughens it, and causes it to adhere more closely to the shell.
4 Biggest challenge: The lack of co-operation from the girls themselves because they adhere more to what they are told rather than what they want.
5 We did but aid him to adhere more closely to the injunctions and precepts of Him whose servant and disciple he claims to be.
6 OPEC met late on Wednesday and agreed to hold its oil production targets unchanged, but Badri said members should adhere more strictly to the curbs.
7 H. pylori are able to adhere more strongly to type A erythrocytes, and this is related to iron shift from the host to the bacteria.
8 He adhered more religiously to the letter of the Constitution than either.
9 Yet no man adhered more closely and more steadily to his principles and opinions.
10 Realistic productive imagery, as its name implies, adheres more strictly to actual conditions, it deals with the probable.
11 Or who adhered more heroically to his convictions of duty in the face of deadly peril and certain suffering?
12 Sin adheres more firmly to him who is without attachment even as lac and wood adhere firmly to each other.
13 Great, massive, sullen structure-begunin the Eleventh Century - it adheres more closely to its Norman type than does any other building in England.
14 "You adhere more than ever, I see, to your opinion that we are going to fail?"
15 "But soot adheres more closely," argued Tony solemnly, "and I know that we shan't get a bath for at least a week afterwards."
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: