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

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1 In the case of household waste , the price rarely covers more than a fraction of the cost of collection and sorting .
2 Arkwright certainly picked a great spot for his country residence : south facing and above a lazy curve in the river , with the high cliff opposite guaranteeing more than a modicum of privacy , and only five minutes from work !
3 And does it not have the ludicrous implication that a two-month-old only knows more than the two-week-old because he is more active ?
4 6 October , 1835 FELIX MENDELSSOHN writes to his family from Leipzig : ‘ The day after I accompanied the Hensels to Delitzsch , Chopin arrived here ; he would not stay more than a day , and so we spent it together entirely , and played music .
5 But the author ( and readers ) will want some written commentary to accompany the figures and here caution must be exercised not to claim more than the figures warrant .
6 Names and positions are as important as addresses and telephone numbers and some directories do not give more than the editors ' and advertisement managers ' names .
7 Also , the cost of services has to be borne , in the main , from central or local government coffers , because most older people can not meet more than a fraction of the costs of the high levels of labour-intensive care they need .
8 Space does not permit more than a summary of the aspects the would-be consultant needs to consider jointly to ensure both a good beginning and optimum development for such a group , and readers are therefore referred to the guidelines offered in detail elsewhere ( cf Hanko 1985/7 ) .
9 However , we will not pay more than the market value of the package .
10 But the cylinders were so small they could not hold more than a minute of material .
11 Cup-tie , with Bailey playing for the well-known London amateur side , Walthamstow Avenue , who switched the replay to Stamford Bridge because their home ground could not hold more than a fraction of the spectators who wanted to attend .
12 Secondly , a company 's articles could not require more than a 50% majority for the appointment or removal of directors , nor confer on holders of a particular class of shares an exclusive right to nominate directors .
13 Though soon earning more than an apprentice boy of her age , she was unlikely to keep much of her wages for herself in the early years .
14 ‘ You ca n't possibly do more than an hour , not after a full day 's rehearsal .
15 perhaps this was because he could hardly see more than a yard in front of his face .
16 I told him about the cold-water tap , how it did not always produce more than a trickle , how frequently the pressure let us down .
17 The question now arises : can that rational animal Man ever become more than an animal which criticizes its own spontaneous tendencies in the light of its awareness of itself and of external conditions ?
18 I 'm sure it 'll cost more than a quid but seeing as you ca n't like get more than a mile long piece anyway so
19 They hardly spoke more than a couple of words in six months .
20 If neural networks are ever to become more than a lab curiosity with the odd exotic application in the real world , Intel Corp 's new Ni1000 chip , developed with Providence , Rhode Island-based Nestor Inc should provide the breakthrough .
21 These do n't usually rise more than a couple of hundred metres before falling back along parabolic paths .
22 Coun. Ian Paterson ( C ) said he was worried the Dolphin Centre would eventually cost more than the £4.5m. allocated .
23 In the past , the guards have smacked of overkill , since it rarely takes more than a baton charge with their lathi sticks to quell the traditional rotten orange barrage that welcomes most touring teams .
24 ‘ He also had more than a crush , ’ Vitor declared .
25 I also have more than a thought for the people who do have homes but who are living in conditions of appalling squalor , for battered wives and abused children who stay at home because there 's nowhere safe for them to go , and for the husbands who choose to stay with their families in the north rather than abandon them for crazy periods of time because they could find work only in the south , And while we 're on the subject , I 'm sick and tired of listening to government and commerce saying it 's ‘ uneconomic ’ to locate businesses in the north of Britain when we 're currently importing billions of pounds ’ worth of consumer goods from the other side of the world .
26 Their inherent vulnerability in many societies — a condom often costs more than a prostitute — is often encouraged in political manipulations of religious precepts .
27 Although the names looked at so far dip more than a toe into this price region , we feel like trying a different brand .
28 They point out that the acquisition , which now comprises more than a quarter of the MAC 's permanent collection , is of extremely uneven quality , but the MAC policy practically forbids deaccessioning .
29 Secondly , the marketers of such a financial product often need more than the lifestyle information can provide on its own .
30 It rarely took more than an hour .
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