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more affluent
adjective as in wealthy
Strongest matches
Strong match
Weak matches
Example Sentences
The more affluent a society, the more educated, the more democratic, the more networked, and so on.
And the boomers—at least those in the more affluent classes—are about to get yet another windfall.
The gains are captured by the immigrants themselves, and secondarily by more affluent Americans.
“During more affluent times, we could afford to bury this kind of conflict,” Pomp explains.
And where voters were more affluent and moderate, Romney romped.
The habits of a University are very fair tests of the habits of the more affluent, and upper middle classes of the nation.
His wife was the reverse of smart, but she was loud in her admiration of her more affluent cousin's stiff silks and laces.
Goodness is perhaps more affluent, more catholic in its bounty; kindness more delicate and discriminating.
My mother's circumstances were more affluent; she was daughter of a Mons.
Poverty had not robbed the four young hostesses of a109 cheery, happy-go-lucky air that charmed their more affluent guests.
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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
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