22 examples of be more able in sentences

goodness I have so much knowledge, as to affirm, with the utmost confidence, that he is better acquainted than any lord in this assembly with the present state of Europe; so that he is more able to judge by what methods tranquillity may be reestablished; and that he pursues the best methods with the utmost purity of intention, and the most incessant diligence and application.

I am very far, my lords, from thinking, that there are this year any peculiar reasons for tolerating murder; nor can I conceive why the manufacture should be held sacred now, if it be to be destroyed hereafter; we are, indeed, desired to try how far this law will operate, that we may be more able to proceed with due regard to this valuable manufacture.

Here the way is more open, and, although we also deeply feel the effects of the storm which has been permitted to assail our little Society, we are more able to endure it; and desire to abide in our tents, except when called upon to defend that immediate teaching of the blessed Saviour, upon which we depend for our little portion of daily bread.

For this disappointment he might have considered it to be some compensation that his work had procured him the kindness of those who were more able to estimate it.

Nothing that we have said must be considered as detracting from Mr. Goadby's proper merits as an industrious and skilful specialist, who is more able with his microscope than with his pen, and more at home with the latter in telling us what he has seen than in writing a general treatise on so vast a subject as Physiology.

Happily no people, with local and transitory exceptions never to be wholly avoided, are more able than the people of the United States to spare for the public wants a portion of their private means, whether regard be had to the ordinary profits of industry or the ordinary price of subsistence in our country compared with those in any other.

The greater number, and those who, from their age, were more able to recollect these events, represent it to have occurred in the present year.

Maso knew himself to be irresponsible by situation, for it was not an easy matter to bring him within the grasp of the authorities; and as for the others, most of them were far too insignificant to feel much apprehension for a reparation that would be most likely, if it fell at all, to fall on those who were more able to bear it.

"Are you well?" "Perfectly well, I have had a varied experience since I met you, but I have no reason to complain, and I think my experience has been invaluable to me, and with this larger experience and closer observation, I feel that I am more able to help others, and that, I feel, has been one of my most valued acquirements.

This," adds he, "is but a very faint description; you will be more able to judge of it by what you have felt yourself upon the like occasions.

Be not, therefore discouragedwhat you have written will do a great deal of good; and could you still trouble yourself with our welfare, no man is more able to give aid to the laboring side.

Be not, therefore, discouragedwhat you have written will do a great deal of good; and could you still trouble yourself with our welfare, no man is more able to give aid to the laboring side.

Be not, therefore, discouragedwhat you have written will do a great deal of good; and could you still trouble yourself with our welfare, no man is more able to give aid to the laboring side.

Be not, therefore discouragedwhat you have written will do a great deal of good; and could you still trouble yourself with our welfare, no man is more able to give aid to the laboring side.

Be not, therefore, discouragedwhat you have written will do a great deal of good; and could you still trouble yourself with our welfare, no man is more able to give aid to the laboring side.

Be not, therefore, discouragedwhat you have written will do a great deal of good; and could you still trouble yourself with our welfare, no man is more able to give aid to the laboring side.

Before we thought of landing I had undressed myself, in order to dry my clothes; I might have put them on again, but the resolution to land having been taken, I thought that without clothes, I should be more able to swim in case of need.

Dubois, however, was more able and more farsighted in his foreign policy than the majority of his predecessors and his contemporaries were; without definitively losing the alliance of Spain, re-attached to the interests of France by the double treaty of marriage, he had managed to form a firm connection with England, and to rally round France the European coalition but lately in arms against her.

As I trace a few of her experiences, which are all true incidents, I trust they may sink into some perplexed mother's heart and enable her to wield the instruments of love and prayer about her darlings and to be more able to guide their tender hearts in the right course.

"Every man," says Swift, "is more able to explain the subject of an art than its professors; a farmer will tell you, in two words, that he has broken his leg; but a surgeon, after a long discourse, shall leave you as ignorant as you were before."

" "He might," conceded Mr. Hucks guardedly, "and he mightn't; and then again he might be more able than willin'.

Never have the leaders at the fore in all parties been more able and high-minded.

22 examples of  be more able  in sentences