We have no meanings for "more descriptive" in our records yet.
1 Maybe a fractal is more descriptive of a company than a spreadsheet.
2 Matthew has more detail, more thought; Luke is more picturesque, more descriptive .
3 Others, such as The Mudpile and Disappearing Tower, are more descriptive .
4 Newspaper articles are more descriptive than any other sort of writing.
5 A muddy smudge is more descriptive . He rubbed his face with his hands.
6 Mr Jack says young people want censor warnings on packaging to be more descriptive .
7 If I knew, don't you think I would've said something more descriptive than something weird?
8 The term was more descriptive than derogatory, she said.
9 But your kind of visual acuity is more descriptive .
10 What name could seem more descriptive of a certain illustrious Archbishop of Westminster than 'Manning'?
11 Spiritual and sensual are much more descriptive terms.
12 One of the first colonists had coined a name for this phenomenon that was more descriptive than scientific.
13 To make both sides' obligations clear, it would help if the Residential Tenancies Act was more descriptive , she said.
14 Few dissipations ripple the gentle flow-whichit were more descriptive perhaps to call stagnation-oflife in that model village.
15 Her letter to Belle was more descriptive of her daily life, of the kindness she received on every hand.
16 Lavish would be more descriptive .
Other examples for "more descriptive"
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This collocation consists of: More descriptive through the time
More descriptive across language varieties