Example sentences of "[adj] go further [subord] " in BNC.

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1 But the Public Order Act of 1986 goes further than either Lord Scarman or Sir Robert Mark had envisaged by giving new powers to the police to impose conditions on public assemblies as well as on processions .
2 In the long run it may be possible to go further than this , to appropriate in the form of tax revenue a large part of the income which workers would otherwise have put into long-term savings schemes , and to expand commensurately the socialised provision for retired workers ( state pensions plus appropriate social amenities ) .
3 In the library context it should be possible to go further than the catalogue to establish relevance , i.e. , to go beyond the question put to the catalogue and include the user 's relevance judgements after examining the actual documents on the shelves .
4 To herself she had to admit that she would have been willing to go further than talk .
5 As has consistently been the case , Paisley and other DUP politicians were prepared to go further than the Official Unionists and the provincial leadership of the Orange Order .
6 Pollitt , at the Seventh World Congress of the Comintern , was prepared to go further than the ILP .
7 This went further than previous decisions , which had hitherto required some independent illegality in the conduct of the person whose conduct was called in question .
8 However , the effect of ss 6 and 7 goes further because their wording is also wide enough to regulate contracts which permit the inclusion of such warranties , but then seek to nullify that inclusion by excluding liability for breach of the warranties so included .
9 What would it feel like to go further than just kissing ? she wondered hazily .
10 It is probably better to go further than this , for the husband may die and the wife ( by virtue of Trustee Act 1925 , s36 ) could appoint a new trustee malleable to her wishes and to the detriment of the husband 's estate .
11 Even if the second pre-condition is met , Albert Reynolds is unlikely to go further than to promise that a referendum would be held , if everything else was agreed .
12 It is true that the Act of 1987 goes further than any other drawn to our attention .
13 It will be necessary to go further than familiar , correct but general injunctions ‘ to question and challenge , as well as support officers ’ ( Sealey , 1990 ) .
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