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How to use more so in a sentence

Looking for sentences with "more so"? Here are some examples.

Sentence Examples
He had always been her parent, even more so than her own biological mother and father.
And, once again, traditionalists are reacting against globalization just as vehemently, if not more so, as they did against modernity.
Indeed, Morrissey's new songs are the most rapturously received, more so even than the Smiths gems that he periodically drops into our laps.
A planet in detriment or fall is in a precarious condition, more so if it is peregrine or otherwise afflicted.
The new American policy provides the missing link in a vicious circle that is as dangerous as the arms race of the Cold War, if not more so.
It keeps you up for days, takes away all inhibitions and is as addictive if not more so than heroin.
When our stuff all came together it became a mishmash, even more so than it was before.
If the band were laidback before going through the mill, they seem even more so now.
Her skills as a tragedienne come forward in Rigoletto and even more so in La traviata, where she is an unforgettably poignant Violetta.
The tondo, much more so than the altarpiece, was not a clear-cut category in quattrocento and early cinquecento Florence.
The film's punchline is also a beaut, all the more so because it's tactfully handled, and you never see it coming.
There were those who profited from the event, none more so than the tilers, bricklayers and glaziers whose wages trebled.
The chances of a child injuring his front teeth are quite high, especially when they protrude, more so in contact sports.
Tradition too is an important element, more so when one scrutinises the fundamentals of the game.
Her gray dress was torn and dirty, marked more so by several spots of blood.
Conditions were very different in the marchlands beyond the Pale and still more so in the Irish areas.
He is not a homicidal maniac, but a violent, evil man made even more so by his addiction to unnamed drugs.
The insurance on the plane was almost prohibitive and finding an airport and hangar for the bird was even more so.
Dominoes, playing cards, counters and teetotums were all used to play games in the 19th century but with adults more so than with children.
Yes, the neighbours are exceptionally friendly and talkative, but no more so than the ones where we lived before.
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Examples from Classical Literature
Difficult as the subject of the Elzevir press is, that of the Aldine press is more so.
And all the more so, since for strength and toughness its eyes by nature are the best constructed.
Is it not possible that their acquaintance with climatology was as exact or even more so than our own?
Much as the cobblers had been surprised, they were still more so when the bird began to speak.
The squirrel is provident, but no more so than he is fastidious in the choice of his food.
None is more so than the foulard dress of a dark color, with branches of foliage and large bouquets of flowers.
The Laotian is as superstitious as the Cambodian, and perhaps more so than the Siamese.
Anmia is a specially frequent attendant of gastralgia, more so than of other neuralgias.
But if Silas found it impossible to speak, far more so it seemed to Joseph.
Human freedom is on the march, and nowhere more so than our own hemisphere.
Launceston and Hobart are as jealous of each other, if not more so, than Melbourne and Sydney.
It is most frequent in males, and more so in the intemperate than in the abstinent.
The war against the pirates of Sicily and isauria was not only very important in itself, but still more so in its consequences.
But debasing as this vice is, it is scarcely more so than solitary gratification.
And still more so when the argument is for punishing more gravely the enemy of the declarant.
The mass was an ornate one, though not more so than they were accustomed to at Beaulieu.
Mrs. Denton was helpful, and would have been more so, if Joan had only understood.
The animal inhabiting the shell is exceedingly simple in structure, even more so than the amba.
Doubtless the drake is aberrated, and his accomplice still more so, but nature deserves part of the blame.
This Draconian injunction had to be obeyed, the more so as the lieutenant was labouring under great excitement.
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