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The phrase "a lot more combative" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe someone or something that is significantly more aggressive or confrontational than before or compared to another entity.
Example: "In recent debates, the candidate has become a lot more combative, challenging his opponents more aggressively than in previous discussions."
Alternatives: "much more aggressive" or "significantly more confrontational."
Exact(2)
"That's a lot more combative".
Behind the comments was also a veiled threat that the US remained the superior world power for now and its president could get a lot more combative in future.
Similar(58)
We were more combative and crazy and had a lot more words to say, but I think we just grew up, and it bleeds through to the community".
After rejecting the first two bids as "fundamentally undervaluing" the business, Aer Lingus is a lot more positive this morning about a possible takeover by International Airlines Group, the British Airways owner run by the combative Willie Walsh.
A lot more money.
A lot more attention.
A lot more time.
And a lot more.
A lot more.
A lot more often.
A lot more bottles".
More suggestions(16)
a lot more enjoyable
a lot more sophisticated
a lot more robust
a lot more resilient
a lot more interesting
a lot more powerful
a lot more fragile
a lot more attractive
a lot more complex
a lot more confident
a lot more difficult
a lot more efficient
a lot more reasonable
a lot more reliable
a lot more real
a lot more hard
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com