11 Metaphors for significant

But most significant of all political matters is the growing distrust of legislatures.

The most significant of her pictures is "The Little Handorgan-Player with His Monkey."

Significant was his early rehabilitation of popular folk-tales and chapbooks, as in The Wonderful Love-Story of Beautiful Magelone and Count Peter of Provence (1797).

It began by adopting rules of order, and the most significant of these was the provision for secrecy.

The most significant of all the signs was the attitude of Moslems.

In 1808 he delivered a series of lectures on dramatic art and literature in Vienna, which enjoyed enormous popularity, and are still reckoned the crowning achievement of his career; perhaps the most significant of these is his discourse on Shakespeare.

The most significant of modern developments in legislation concerning voting is the new practice of recognizing by law political parties, and of regulating by law the mode of their nominations.

Significant is the introduction of the great navigator: Christophorus quidam Colonus, vir ligur.

But more significant than leafless trees was the luxuriant holly with its ripe, red berries, gayly ready for Christmas decorations and to grace the birth of a new year.

A factor overlooked, but even more significant than training or staff work, was that what might be called martial team-play had become an instinct with the continental peoples through the necessity of their situation.

Thus very white, exceedingly white, perfectly white, are terms quite as significant as whiter and whitest, if not more so.

11 Metaphors for  significant