Similar words: trigger, big, suggest, a big deal, a big shot, suggestion, ambiguous, eager. Meaning: [bɪg] adj. large or big relative to something else.
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211. The way he sees it, each town is like a neighborhood in a much bigger community.
212. Yet bigger men than them have learned to their cost that no one can behave like that.
213. But Arnold Thomas smelled a bigger profit from the up-and-coming developers who were looking to build back-to-backs for the mill-workers.
214. But I had to make a bigger adjustment to studying.
215. The shape of the skull began to retain more juvenile shape into adulthood, with a bigger brain and a smaller jaw.
216. Soon even bigger money began to flow-and not just to leading banks in Britain and the United States.
217. The most successful, Susan Faludi's Backlash, achieved a much bigger multiple, selling 40,000 copies.
218. The agency has recently outlined some ambitious plans[http://sentencedict.com], including a bigger budget for the Ames laboratory to carry out more experiments.
219. I say bigger brother, but the 880 is only really comparable with the 990 for resolution and performance.
220. There's a bigger doubt though, over Martin Ling, who's got a calf strain.
221. Cluster flies are bristly gray insects, about five times bigger than the ordinary housefly, Musca domestica.
222. I am sure it will but I also think that it will take sales away from the bigger, but less attractive 5-Series.
223. Then he went on to say that he intended to make a third, yet bigger, batch of Recipe 179.
224. You're just being greedy, you lot, she shouted, your eyes are bigger than your bellies.
More similar words: trigger, big, suggest, a big deal, a big shot, suggestion, ambiguous, eager, finger, German, singer, surgery, manager, imagery, teenager, any longer, drudgery, in danger, no longer, menagerie, passenger, out of danger, refrigerator.