Example sentences of "[conj] more [subord] " in BNC.

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1 Inform them , in complete confidence , of any suspicions you have of people breeding dogs on unlicensed premises ( where more than two bitches are kept for profit ) .
2 It has its roots in northern Europe , particularly Denmark , where more than 120 co-housing projects have been built since 1972 .
3 Using Fresno as our base , the next two days continue on a grand scale with a visit on Wednesday to Ruanne Dairies , where more than 3000 cows are milked in one herd , and to the Harris Beef Lot where over 100,000 head of beef cattle are finished every year on just 16ha ( 40 acres ) .
4 It was feared Italians had voted for ‘ a Polish parliament ’ , where more than a dozen parties will be represented in parliament , incapable of supporting a coherent government coalition .
5 The 100lb Semtex bomb shattered glass in a wide area , most notably in the 23-storey Commercial Union Building , which lost all its windows , and NatWest tower , where more than 200 were smashed .
6 However , Miller only advised budding for less vigorous roses or where more than one variety was required on the same plant and then a compatible growth habit was essential .
7 Where more than two pellet samples are available , for instance for barn owls and tawny owls , the within species similarities observed in bone breakage and digestion are greater than the differences from other species , and this indicates that single pellet collections probably are representative of the species .
8 The Factories ( Canteens ) Order No 1993 of 1940 required provision of suitable canteens where hot meals could be purchased in factories where more than 250 persons were employed on Government Work .
9 It has been held that where more than one assessment was raised under different statutory provisions in respect of the same amount then , provided these were clearly alternative assessments , they were not void .
10 Where more than 700 competitive service specialists offer you one-stop shopping .
11 This was supported by observations of approaches to models at a study plot where more than 400 colour-marked birds were present ; no marked individual approached more than once .
12 There were only four such murder cases ( discounting the M4 Rapist case , which we consider separately ) where there was more than three days ' coverage or where more than five newspapers included reports of the search .
13 It was translated to Russian and became a popular minicomputer product in the former Soviet Union , where more than 600 mid-range machines have been operating Pick-based applications for the past 10 years .
14 I shall allow my hypothetical ideal natural lawyer his fundamental principle or principles and enter no objections as to the difficulties of conflicts between and priorities amongst fundamental principles where more than one is in question .
15 Moreover , where more than one of such general characteristics are treated as identifying criteria , provision may be made for their possible conflict by their arrangement in an order of superiority , as by the common subordination of custom or precedent to statute , the latter being a ‘ superior source ’ of law …
16 If free trade remains the objective then agreements on international aspects of competition policy to collaborate in the implementation of competition policy , where more than one economy is affected , will be required .
17 Provided that where more than one application for a licence has been made in respect of any premises , the licensing board may hear and consider such applications together .
18 The achievement of a proper mix of specialist and voluntary services and of working links and effective referral systems for the handling of people 's problems where more than one agency needs to be involved . ’
19 However , where more than one person is involved as an attacker , section 3(2) provides that :
20 ( 3 ) Batch input screens ( eg absence and overtime ) where more than one employee 's information could be updated using the same input screen ( updated overnight ) .
21 results are consistent between assessors , where more than one assessor assessed the same unit/module ;
22 In New York State where 25 per cent of the electorate is Black , where more than 40,000 Americans live homeless , where drug dealing and drug addiction terrorize every neighborhood , where bridges collapse and subways defy your tolerance for filth , and where public schools fail to keep most of their students and also fail to teach the ones who stay , what was ‘ the issue of Israel ’ ?
23 Here desires to construct a version of the play that best reflects Christopher Marlowe is decidedly the result of continuities and exclusions recognised ( and desired ) by editors anxious to contain the play , to create a singular text where more than one exists .
24 Western journalists were taken by the Iraqi authorities to the site , where more than 300 bodies — including those of at least 91 children — were recovered , many burnt beyond recognition , and it was feared that many others remained buried in the wreckage .
25 Indeed these two characteristics are all that is needed in the case of the adjective ; the relative clause is in a sense a stalking horse , convenient in that it is more tangible than the relation around which it is built , but unnecessary , and awkward in that it brings with it , in English , the requirement that it must express a tense ; for while it is often possible to read a tense into an adjective there is no reason whatever to suppose that there is always some particular tense present to the mind of the speaker but suppressed , as can be seen from instances like ( 35 ) , where more than one tense could plausibly be grafted onto the sense expressed by the phrase underlined , or , just as well , some adverbial notion like " because " or " if " without any specific tense being implied : ( 35 ) motorists guilty will have to pay heavy fines Likewise , the buildings adjacent of example ( 17 ) simply take their tense from that of the clause as a whole ; if , for instance , we were to switch the tense of the verb in that example in order to shift the whole situation to past time : ( 36 ) the buildings adjacent were closed for three days it would be quite unnecessary to presume that an independent mental re-assignment of tense , from present to past , internal to the phrase buildings adjacent , has to take place as well .
26 As a first step towards dealing with these two questions , the 1977 review proposed that EC policy should increasingly be concerned with problems arising from peripherality , particularly where more than one nation was involved , or from the consequences of other EC policies , such as CAP .
27 They could be seen in constant arguments in every European court , as in the past , about the relative positions of diplomats on formal and even informal occasions , their placing at table at meals where more than one was present , the precise way in which they were conducted to their first audience with the ruler to whom they were accredited , when and whether they stood or sat at such audiences , the precise moment when they or the ruler removed their hats , and a variety of such tremendous niceties .
28 Their concern centres around the Bering Sea , where more than a dozen species are in decline including fur seals , Steller sea lions , cod , pollock and numerous sea birds .
29 Application for such payment can be made where more than £500 is claimed or involved ( Ord 13 , r 12 ) .
30 Where payment into court is made : ( 1 ) by one or more of several defendants sued jointly or in the alternative ( unless the matter is settled by acceptance and the claims against the other defendants are abandoned and they agree in writing ) ; ( 2 ) with a defence of tender before action ; ( 3 ) in admiralty actions ; ( 4 ) where the plaintiff is a person under disability ; ( 5 ) where more than one person is entitled to the money in claims under the Fatal Accident Act 1976 and/or the Law Reform ( Miscellaneous Provisions ) Act 1934 ( Ord 11 , r 1(7) and Ord 11 , r 4(2) , ( 3 ) ) .
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