We have no meanings for "more distrustful" in our records yet.
1 He was more distrustful of himself, more accessible to persuasion than usual.
2 Should I make those good men more distrustful than they are?
3 Buck looked meaner and uglier and more distrustful than ever.
4 And to tell him of this dilemma would make him more distrustful than ever.
5 A subtle and fearful kind of people-shouldnot be made more distrustful , but assured.
6 It leaves each of them a little more distrustful , a little more on guard.
7 He was beginning to be more afraid and more distrustful of his nephew than ever.
8 He'd never really trusted Remington, and with this added luxury he was becoming even more distrustful .
9 I'd never met a more distrustful person.
10 Maurice Oakley was perhaps a shade more distrustful of his servants, and consequently more testy with them.
11 There is no more distrustful man than the simple gentleman of honour who finds himself deceived and tricked.
12 This very silence made Mulford more distrustful and anxious, for he feared a trap was set for him.
13 The Indians grew more distrustful .
14 Newspapers are leaving ad networks, limiting their ad inventory, and generally becoming more distrustful of what networks bring to the table.
15 The carnage then made among the natives has rendered them more distrustful , and more averse to the inhabitants of the missions.
16 The Queen is even more distrustful of me than the King, so that I think their safety lies in your hands.
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This collocation consists of: More distrustful across language varieties