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larger

[ UK /lˈɑːd‍ʒɐ/ ]
[ US /ˈɫɑɹdʒɝ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. large or big relative to something else

How To Use larger In A Sentence

  • Larger butter pieces (not huge, of course, but quite a bit larger than “wet sand”) result in a flakier biscuit. 2009 March | Baking Bites
  • I've wondered why pop-up ads and new larger sized, intrusively placed ads are so annoying.
  • It was then allowed to recover on the stringer in deeper water before being returned alive to grow on to even larger proportions.
  • Tåkern is quite a large lake and in olden times it must have been larger still. The Wonderful Adventures of Nils
  • A second wave of emigrations of Ashkenazic Jews from Eastern Europe at the end of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries brought larger numbers of Yiddish-speaking, traditional Orthodox Jews into the Seattle community. Weaving Women's Words: Seattle Stories
  • In addition, experimental flowers that matured a fruit (and therefore received a visit) had significantly larger corollas compared with corollas of flowers that did not initiate a fruit.
  • In patients without subarachnoid hemorrhage from a separate aneurysm, larger aneurysms also were more likely to rupture.
  • Someone co-ordinated with the radio or TV producers and sponsors, and held a larger vision of the whole than either performer or listener could.
  • The phenomenon, called tachyphylaxis, means larger and larger doses are needed to have an effect. The Sun
  • Rather than be seen as lecturing China on its exchange rate, the United States should be doing even more to push its European allies to allow a larger Chinese voice in multilateral forums. Beyond brinkmanship: A better economic path for the U.S. and China
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