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

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1 The bureaucrat is assumed as a general rule to know more than the sponsor about factor costs and production processes involved in the bureau 's services .
2 However , a horse needs more than the space necessary to exercise both body and mind .
3 True , this remedy contains more than an element of ‘ big brother ’ and it may be that it does no more than turn the criminals away from the areas covered by the cameras ' eyes .
4 ROWLAND S HOWARD These Immortal Souls ' Australian exile recounts more than a decade on the musical edge …
5 For there 's nothing the Scots enjoy more than the scoring of own goals .
6 Alex Miller 's team asked no questions of a drastically altered Ibrox side containing more than a smattering of Rangers ' impressive reserve strength .
7 the pundits reckon more than a £100,000 resting on the Pall mall alone .
8 Indeed , most secondary schools use more than the 5% of time allocated to Religious Education .
9 Is the kingdom of God spoken of in the New Testament simply ‘ the moral organisation of the human race ’ , or does that conception owe more than the Liberals themselves realised to their own enlightened and optimistic view of the development of Protestant culture in their own day ?
10 Fired by religious fervour and armed with weapons supplied by the United States and their Muslim neighbour Pakistan , the rebels resisted doggedly and fought a war in which their superior mobility and unconventional guerrilla tactics proved more than a match for the Soviet military machine .
11 Neither side had more than a couple of scoring chances in the first half , and Ecchinswell took advantage of the first of these , breaking through after dispossessing Martin Whiddett on the sideline and finding a vast opening in the Alton defence .
12 But the exiled soldier wanted more than a place to stay : he wanted , to a Peter Pan-ish degree , everything as it had been in his childhood home .
13 With these decisions Darwin became more than the protégé of Lyell .
14 Then too , Sun has more than a touch of the ‘ not invented here ’ syndrome .
15 Certainly the Springbok squad for their tour of France and England has more than a touch of the curate 's egg about it .
16 It seems to me that unless you can convince yourself that a grouping of companies adds more than the sum of its parts , there is no raison d'etre for the company at all .
17 Mr Marzio also maintains that the tax law affects more than the stream of gifts to museums .
18 Sketching out the good and bad side of human nature … cartoons get a fleeting glance in daily papers … but for many there 's a more serious side … the cartoonists work raises more than a smile .
19 According to Bill Martin , economist at UBS-Phillips & Drew : ‘ The only thing the Chancellor fears more than the currency speculators are the rows of blue rinses at Blackpool next week ’ .
20 In the case of Sheffield City Council v A.D.H. Demolition Ltd the Divisional court of the queens bench made it clear , for the first time in a reported case , that ‘ premises ’ within s.1(1) of the 1968 Act covered more than a building standing on a particular piece of ground , but did include a vacant site .
21 As a friend with three children at public school put it , ‘ My last term 's bills totalled more than the price of the wife 's new care ’ .
22 Now , Harry was certain , Cornelius meant more than the length of time a middle-aged man should give himself to recover from influenza .
23 At stake lay more than the future of the English garrison in the town which the French were besieging and blockading by land and sea .
24 This might imply that Thucydides knew more than the Assembly did .
25 In the Netherlands , the task of refining and extending the revolutionary concept of the Woonerf and separately applying its most valuable elements continues more than a decade after its inception .
26 Though of course Müller-Claudius 's ‘ sample ’ was hardly a representative one , the responses have more than a ring of plausibility about them , and , coming from Nazis who had been in the Party since before Hitler 's ‘ seizure of power ’ , can be extended a fortiori to ‘ non-organized ’ Germans .
27 The concentration of chloride in interstitial water in the unsaturated zone is a chemical record that represents recharge to the saturated zone covering more than a century .
28 But there are too few projects like Cleevedon , and too little money to help more than a handful of youngsters every year .
29 There is also initial reluctance to spare more than an hour , though experience shows that interviewees will find time for three or four more sessions .
30 A team has a mix of people who contribute in different but complementary ways thus achieving synergy , ie the team produces more than the sum of its individuals .
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