This sentence is used as an Idiomatic expression when you descirbe the integrity or honesty or law-abiding nature of a person. Such person exhibits exceptinal honesty in life and abide by the rules of land in letter and spirit.
=Murty,Hyderabad
The idiom means someone who unnecessarily behaves more concerned about matters that concern someone else and ought not to have been of such concern to him. Generally it is spoken about sycophants and cronies for their undue zeal and interest in matters owed directly to someone else.
More than Beautiful.
more than
more than a notion
More important than others.
plentiful as in Africa has abundant wildlife
the king to rule them
You can be Loyal to the rules
I'd say Simba, he's a king after all, shes only a lady
No- not unless it is in quotes and refers to the word, rather than its meaning. Example. "loyal" is an adjective in the English language. The noun form is loyalty .
true.
No more so than others.
He thought that the Catholics would be more loyal to the church than to Germany
It depend son the dog or the horse
Camels are known for being far more loyal than any other animal including dogs, horses and squirrel.
A word with more than one meaning is called a homonym.
There are no suffixes meaning exactly more than But, If you are comparing you should use -er
It is used to indicate that a statement has more than one meaning