We have no meanings for "savour too" in our records yet.
1 All new methods savour too much of compulsion.
2 Did it savour too much of Mazzini?
3 I want to help you all I can, but your actions savour too much of a peremptory jack-in-the-box, even in these bureaucratic days.
4 Indeed, I should say that the system pursued savours too much of the military.
5 All that savours too much of popery is left out.
6 Making babies' shoes, somehow, savoured too much of darning stockings.
7 Her attitude towards Carlotta savours too much of idolatry.
8 His adventures on that night savoured too strongly of house-breaking to be drawn attention to.
9 The end proposed was a reasonable one, but the means employed savoured too much of intrigue.
10 His fellow workman, who was of stiffer courage, rejected it with scorn, as savouring too much of the superstitious.
11 In a spirit that perhaps savoured too much of unbelief I cried out, How long, O Lord, how long?
12 At the present day this method is regarded as barbarous, and savouring too largely of the methods and practice of the old empirics.
13 It savours too strongly of the school and class-room, basing its appeal upon words, upon spoken expositions, instructive no doubt, but cold, academic.
14 "-"Yes ,butsuch love is foolishness and wrong in itself, and ought to be conquered," answered Adams; "it savours too much of the flesh.
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