Example sentences of "[adv] more [conj] [prep] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 [ 7.1 ] If the Lease is completed rent shall be payable in accordance with the terms of the Lease with effect from the Rent Commencement Date [ [ 7.2 ] The Tenant shall commence trading from the Premises not more than after the Completion Date ] It is important to ascertain if any rent free period is to include not only the rack rent but also service charges and/or insurance premiums .
2 In this low undergrowth their disorganized progress and uneven , differing rhythms of movement delayed them still more than in the wood .
3 And this , far more than in the past , will determine the legality or illegality of the action .
4 With that in mind , will he assure the House that he will try to integrate training between reserve forces and regulars far more than in the past ?
5 It also saw one very important new development ; its extension far more than in the past to bind Europe to other continents .
6 Three years later the introduction of a new registration system for despatches and telegrams played a crucial role in changing the position of the more senior officials , the first-division clerks , and giving them , far more than in the past , a share in policy-making .
7 Barrow admits his new job occupies his mind far more than in the past .
8 There was always such a lot of scope in hospitals , certainly far more than in the Army sick room .
9 The scientific committee had itself recommended an option calling for as much logging as could be carried out in compliance with US environmental laws , far more than in the option chosen by the President .
10 You were n't more than from the hall you were about six foot to the door to the master bedroom .
11 Rain can thrash its surface , wind can chop it up , and the carp still have to be outwitted ; probably even more than on a water where the natural food is less abundant and the carp are smaller and therefore not so cautious .
12 Perhaps even more than in the case of energising Anglican evangelical clergymen like William Marsh , in the ranks of evangelical nonconformity the powerful leadership of some ministers shaped the attitudes of chapel communities and led them into collaboration across denominational and church/chapel lines .
13 Even more than in the case of war , political sociologists have tended to neglect the more subtle , less blatant influences which affect political change .
14 Nowhere more than in the repeal movement was the link between philanthropic work and an emergent feminist discourse more clearly visible .
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