Example sentences of "[adj] more [subord] a [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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31 It 's all sturdy and dense and impressively intense , but it amounts to little more than a grumpy grumble from the arty side of town .
32 The new government brought in to replace the one that resigned a month ago turns out to be little more than a royal-family reshuffle .
33 I returned to his caravan the following afternoon after school bearing my load , which was by then little more than a dusty stain on the inside of a beaker .
34 Risking the loss of her usual cool dignity , and wearing little more than a feather-trimmed tutu and high heels , Linda was filmed clinging to the building and edging along it before plunging , screaming , to the ground .
35 The policy was based on little more than a vague belief in the large potential for economies of scale and an unquenchable faith among politicians that government agencies could successfully meet short-term political demands — particularly in respect of regional unemployment — in combination with longer-term goals of greater efficiency and higher industrial growth .
36 Though David Newnham , in the Guardian ( 24 July 1990 ) , calls the film " post- modernism : the movie " , Scott 's version is little more than a violent adventure story .
37 The Harpies ' cave is little more than a smelly hollow in the side of the hill , and contains nothing of interest , save for old bones from the Harpies ' victims .
38 A short distance further on , Julius turned off on to what was little more than a narrow track .
39 The stream was little more than a frozen marsh , pierced by tufts of blackened grass .
40 In its time , Gosstandard was regarded by most western vendors as little more than a pseudo tax on western suppliers .
41 If it maintains its present determination to keep little more than a naval force in the region , it will have to convince others ( the Egyptians ?
42 Even the agitations of the women 's movement would have warranted little more than a raised eyebrow from a lass in a Salvation Army bonnet that had to be strong enough to protect the head of the wearer from brick bats and other missiles .
43 Little more than a general impression can be given of the state of music in the churches outside Great Britain .
44 The house was then little more than a pleasant dwelling , but the position was perfect .
45 It was little more than a glass-sided army hut , but there was plenty of mahogany , ebony and zebra skin , and a tall cone of polished copper in the centre of the floor became a fireplace at the touch of a switch .
46 Twenty-four hours before , Nicola Sharpe was little more than a bloody corpse , a name , a glossy image on a television screen .
47 However , it is only fair to add that , in this case , the surviving windmill structure was little more than a ruinous stone stump before conversion work began ( Plate 41 ) .
48 Grand Isle is a precarious headland , little more than a sandy breakwater , a mile across and less in some places .
49 In short , tariffs by themselves would have been unlikely to have provided little more than a temporary palliative to ailing industries over the period under review .
50 The Irish Labour Party in Derry quickly collapsed , leaving McGonagle at the head of his own small Independent Labour group , which was little more than a personal election machine .
51 I gather that the match was played at the new centre — little more than a new clay court being put down in an old car park and towering scaffolding stands then being erected around it , rising almost vertically so that it gave the impression of the fans literally hovering over the court .
52 David Brand 's hip was weakening his strength as an old wound opened up after hours in the water , and now the canoe was little more than a tiny hulk .
53 However , there is a danger that the smoke could be little more than a pungent sign of burning fingers .
54 Aside from the fact that he does n't actually discuss it in any detail , there is little more than a disappointed huffing and puffing at the exhaustion of the avant-garde 's shock value ( backed up by a particularly crass quotation from Peter Bürger about Duchamp 's readymades ) and some utterly routine panting over the outlandish prices being currently paid for Van Goghs — plus a quotation from a sub-Warholian Manhattan ‘ artist ’ answering an art magazine questionnaire with a few smart remarks about business and producing art for the market .
55 Since her return to England , her existence had been little more than a living nightmare .
56 By the end of a week she was little more than a living skeleton : her hand lay all day long in Jennifer 's , and from time to time she would open her eyes , staring pathetically up , with a mute pleading in her expression that no words of comfort or whispered prayers could dispel .
57 In her winter coat she appeared to be little more than a central pole with a tent draped from her shoulders .
58 People occurred along the way and some would be talked to , questioned , while some were passed by with little more than a cursory glance .
59 It was a farm track , little more than a rough pathway across the fields .
60 In so far as it reached out beyond the rather eccentric sect of the Comtist ‘ Religion of Humanity ’ , positivism became little more than a philosophical justification of the conventional method of the experimental sciences , and similarly for most contemporaries Mill was , again in the words of Taine , the man who had opened up ‘ the good old road of induction and experiment ’ .
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