MORE vs DEEPER: NOUN
- An increased amount or quantity.
- Persons of rank; the great.
- Something superior or further or in addition: corresponding to I., 2, with partitive genitive merged.
- A greater quantity, amount, or number.
- English statesman who opposed Henry VIII's divorce from Catherine of Aragon and was imprisoned and beheaded; recalled for his concept of Utopia, the ideal state
- A carrot; a parsnip.
- A plant.
- An obsolete form of moor.
- A hill.
- A mulberry-tree, Morus nigra.
- Delay.
- A formative of comparison, indicating the comparative degree.
- See -mor.
- A root.
- That which is in addition; something other and further; an additional or greater amount.
- Further; beyond a certain time.
- Not anything more; nothing in addition.
- The high and low.
- A root; stock.
- Literary term for an ocean
- The central and most intense or profound part
- A long steep-sided depression in the ocean floor
MORE vs DEEPER: ADJECTIVE
- N/A
- With head or back bent low
- Large in quantity or size
- Extreme
- Relatively thick from top to bottom
- Extending relatively far inward
- Exhibiting great cunning usually with secrecy
- Strong; intense
- Very distant in time or space
- Having great spatial extension or penetration downward or inward from an outer surface or backward or laterally or outward from a center; sometimes used in combination
- Relatively deep or strong; affecting one deeply
- Having or denoting a low vocal or instrumental range
- (of darkness) very intense
- Difficult to penetrate; incomprehensible to one of ordinary understanding or knowledge
- Of an obscure nature
- Comparative form of deep: more deep
- Marked by depth of thinking
MORE vs DEEPER: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To make more; to increase.
- N/A
MORE vs DEEPER: ADVERB
- Used to form the comparative of some adjectives and adverbs
- To have ceased to be.
- In a greater quantity; in or to a greater extent or degree.
- With a verb or participle.
- With an adjective or adverb (instead of the suffix -er) to form the comparative degree.
- In addition; further; besides; again.
- By how much more -- by so much more.
- To a greater degree; by an added quantity; for a reason already specified.
- Comparative of much; to a greater degree or extent
- With continual increase.
- To a great depth
- To an advanced time
- To far into space
MORE vs DEEPER: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To a greater degree or extent
- Comparative of much
- Additional; other.
- (comparative of `many' used with count nouns) quantifier meaning greater in number
- (comparative of `much' used with mass nouns) a quantifier meaning greater in size or amount or extent or degree; above; more than
- In addition; additional: the adjective being before or after the noun, or in the predicate.
- In a greater extent, quantity, or degree.
- [In this sense more is regularly used to modify an adjective or adverb and form a comparative phrase, having the same force and effect as the comparative degree made by the termination -er: as, more wise (wiser), more wisely; more illustrious, more illustriously; more contemptible; more durable. It may be used before any adjective or adverb which admits of comparison, and is generally used with words of more than two syllables, in which the use of the suffix -er would be awkward: as, more curious, more eminent, etc.; formations like curiouser, virtuouser, etc., being avoided, though occasionally used in older writers. Formerly more was very often used superfluously in the comparative: as, more better, braver, fitter, mightier, etc.]
- Further; to a greater distance.
- In addition; besides; again: qualified by such words as any, no, ever, never, once, twice, etc., the two being in some cases also written together as one, as evermore, nevermore, and formerly nomore.
- To make more; increase; enhance.
- To root up.
- Greater; superior; increased
- Greater in amount, extent, number, or degree: the following noun being in effect a partitive genitive: as, more land; more light; more money; more courage.
- In rank, position, or dignity: opposed to less.
- In degree or intensity, especially as comparative of much or as exceeding a small or smaller quantity.
- In number, especially as comparative of many.
- Greater: often indicating comparison merely, not absolutely but relatively greater.
- Greater in quality, amount, degree, quality, and the like; with the singular.
- Greater in number; exceeding in numbers; -- with the plural.
- Besides; indeed.
- (determiner) Comparative form of many: in greater number. (Used for a discrete quantity.)
- (determiner) Comparative form of much: in greater quantity, amount, or proportion. (Used for a continuous quantity.)
- N/A
MORE vs DEEPER: RELATED WORDS
- Bigger, Nearly, Harder, Faster, Larger, Better, Greater, Rather, Fewer, Less, To a greater extent, Added, More than, Further, Additional
- Better, Thicker, Harder, Further, Graver, Stronger, Greater, Fuller, Larger, Bigger, Closer, Broader, Wider, Sharper, Farther
MORE vs DEEPER: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Sooner, Bigger, Nearly, Harder, Faster, Larger, Better, Greater, Rather, Fewer, Less, Added, More than, Further, Additional
- Better, Thicker, Harder, Further, Graver, Stronger, Greater, Fuller, Larger, Bigger, Closer, Broader, Wider, Sharper, Farther
MORE vs DEEPER: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- This offers them more legal protection, but can also be more expensive to obtain.
- As election day approached, more and more voices were raised against the Campbell plan.
- More memory means more software programs can be run at the same time.
- Learn more about your student loan debt, budgeting, and much more through SALT.
- But by that time you had to train more and more people, etc.
- Here, the study of economics is more objective and focuses more on facts.
- ADA makes is both more nuanced and more enduring in its effect.
- May be even make more more worthy for funding and further employment.
- However, with more processing power, this requires more energy consumption, leading computer manufacturers to focus more on energy efficiency in these new computers.
- More validity, More honorable state, more courtship lives In carrion flies than Romeo.
- And because of that, I am struggling spiritually and I feel am going deeper and deeper in things which are not good.
- The king, long in the habit of drowning his cares in wine, plunges deeper and deeper; the queen cries but sins on.
- As the season goes deeper and deeper into January, the prospect of the interview season ending becomes a certainty.
- Digging Deeper Section with more resources for higher thinking and a deeper learning, and a discussion board.
- The tow can happen in shallow or deeper water depending on what each person wants and how comfortable they are with deeper water.
- The Deeper Pro Plus is the top of the line smart phone fish finder from Deeper.
- CD, as a follower obviously of the party of Lincoln, you really should stop digging your hole deeper and deeper.
- You are buried so deep in it and sinking deeper and deeper by the day.
- It ended with student comments that became increasingly pointed, sinking deeper and deeper into the heart.
- In deeper and deeper flow states, when attention gives really focused, that will start moving deeper into the brain.
MORE vs DEEPER: QUESTIONS
- Can randomised controlled trials be more efficient?
- How can Glastonbury be more environmentally friendly?
- Does more voter registration lead to more voter turnout?
- Does drinking more water make you retain more water?
- Are more people looking for more socially responsible and ethical products?
- Why does Elena become more and more interested in the supernatural?
- How does Ellen become more and more involved in the case?
- Is life easier and more fun when we are more approachable?
- Why do atoms with more electrons become more reactive?
- Is much more easier or much more expensive more happy?
- When does poor circulation signal a deeper health issue?
- Why does Jesus always call peter into deeper goodness?
- When did the album a deeper understanding come out?
- How to train deep fitnets (deeper than their teacher)?
- Who are the authors of going deeper with convolutions?
- How is Pusher II thematically deeper than its predecessor?
- Does income inequality run even deeper than previously thought?
- Is it possible to permanently make your voice deeper?
- How does Azure deeper vision work with satellite data?
- Where is the deeper Christian life ministry located?