Example sentences of "[verb] [indef pn] more than [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 What could eat nothin' more than a couple o' chops …
2 In the event one finds a range of immediate answers , each one of which is too simple to reveal or even adequate to explain what soon emerges as a complex process : ‘ Reading is a creation of the sound form of the word on the basis of its graphic reproduction ’ ( the Russian educationist , El'konin , 1973 , p.552 ) ; ‘ Reading is a complex process by which a reader reconstructs , to some degree , a message encoded by a writer in graphic language ’ ( Goodman and Niles , 1970 , p.5 ) ; ‘ Reading involves nothing more than the correlation of a sound image with its corresponding visual image ’ ( Bloomfield , quoted in Harris and Hodges , 1981 , p.264 ) .
3 Of course , I had opened it and found nothing more than a piece of costly silk , blood-red and fringed at each end .
4 Normally , if you want nothing more than a passage anchorage , Dale , down near the entrance , will serve very well , but we felt Neyland merited a first visit , and thanks to going there we had this early morning enchantment of seeing ships , great and small , going about their work .
5 ‘ The tae of ye will need somethin' more than a dispensation from the Pope , Ah would think , if ye go on like this . ’
6 Any basic change in the executive branch of British government will need something more than the type of structural reform of the civil service proposed by the Fulton Committee .
7 Nobody dared to claim that Dukakis represented anything in particular or that he could reliably arouse anything more than a snore , but that was not the point .
8 It is not clear that one has to postulate anything more than a reaction like Pavlov 's dog learning to anticipate its dinner whenever it hears the bell .
9 She disliked the casual way in which he made decisions profoundly affecting other people 's lives — choosing whose tale of woe should be front page news , and whose story deserved nothing more than the wastepaper bin .
10 It costs nothing more than a smile . ’
11 Dickins had had nothing more than a back pass and a free-kick to deal with in the first 30 minutes but showed signs of nervousness when Bull challenged for a Birch free-kick .
12 Observation of operator performance within many high technology systems reveals nothing more than a person sitting at a desk scanning various kinds of displays at intervals and just occasionally picking up a telephone , making a note in a log-book or manipulating a control .
13 He hoped that the driver would remember nothing more than a pair of headlights .
14 This reflects the fact that several kinds of considerations may lead to different and incompatible policies all of which are commonly regarded as policies of neutrality , because all of them demonstrate an even-handed treatment of the parties either by not helping one more than the other , or by not helping one more than the other to take special measures to improve his position in the conflict , and so on .
15 This time with a light plastic bag containing nothing more than a sketchpad and a book ( Sleeman 's Rambles and Recollections of an Indian Official ) I set out to have a look at Roscommon Town .
16 Few children remember anything more than the adverts .
17 ‘ Spurging ’ entailed the general washing of the body with spiced and aromatic water to remove the sweat of the death-bed and generally to clean the corpse ; ‘ cleansing ’ was the euphemism given to the assisted emptying of the bowels and the plugging of the rectum ; the removal of the soft organs , following an incision made from the bottom of the rib cage to the pelvic region , was known as ‘ bowelling ’ ; ‘ searing ’ was the cauterizing of the cavity blood vessels after the removal of the soft organs as a precaution against post-mortem haemorrhaging ; whilst the purification of the inner cavity was the technical ‘ embalming ’ ; the outer surface of the body was ‘ dressed ’ by the application of balms , a mixture of resins in volatile oils ; whilst ‘ furnishing ’ implied nothing more than the positioning of the sudarium ( a linen square covering the face ) and the close wrapping of the corpse in layers of cerecloth and waxed twine .
18 the written transcript will only be used in preference to the tape if neither prosecution nor defence sees any advantage in playing it , but it does not necessarily follow from this that the tape discloses nothing more than the transcript .
19 A piece to be presented should have something more than a surface narrative quality in the characterisation .
20 Maybe it is true that it will take something more than a 44-points thrashing by France to force the IRFU into serious action .
21 But to argue that such developments marked anything more than a beginning would be to over-estimate the significance of what was done .
22 ( The Booker , thought Jeffrey , had recently become nothing more than a branch of Overseas Development . )
23 This expresses nothing more than the notion that the decision should proceed from the proofs and arguments advanced by the parties .
24 The opposition though feels nothing more than a tickle with a feather boa , obviously a pink one .
25 Maxim hoped it sounded as if he were hiding something more than the fact that Blagg had n't been able to tell what they were .
26 Beryl needed firm handling but losing father and brother inside four days must mean something more than the prospect of a secure income .
27 The Hancock Half Hours seemed to be finally at an end and both Ken and his public were ready for something in which ‘ Stop messing about ’ would mean something more than an admonition to an actor to concentrate on his script .
28 An occupier is in such a case liable only where the injury is due to some wilful act involving something more than the absence of reasonable care .
29 We were not used to drinking anything more than a glass of watered wine with our meals , and the effect on us , while not immediate , was catastrophic .
30 For example , the ‘ village community ’ can signify nothing more than a type of settlement — a small number of people living together in a rural location usually in a nucleated pattern .
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