Example sentences of "[pron] [adv] better [subord] " in BNC.

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1 As it happens , he paces himself much better than Corbett and other stand-up comics , and in his own sober way milks the material ruthlessly .
2 Barry now parodies himself even better than Spitting Image .
3 - The banks start promising to look after you much better than ever before , and to shower you with presents .
4 This month , strategy will serve you far better than brute force .
5 I know you , Lissa ; I know you far better than you think , and I know exactly what 's going on in that secretive labyrinth of a mind .
6 They were vague shadowy figures , rather like her own mother had been , except that she remembered them slightly better because , when she had been about eight years old , Granny Tremayne had driven her over to Newquay where they had been staying .
7 I start to hear everything much better than I normally do .
8 The case trotted on at something slightly better than the conventional pace of litigation in this country and arrived at a point where each side had to ‘ discover ’ to the other all relevant documents relating to the matter .
9 Though I trust you may have something slightly better than a stall , ’ suggested the gentleman wryly .
10 Modern linguistics is a field full of conflicting theories , and an external observer would be hard put to accept one as better than the rest .
11 Are we no better than snails , to carry round with us a whole house of past circumstance ? ’
12 This makes them even better because if there is a problem you will have two chances of being paid instead of one .
13 ‘ They knew him much better than I did .
14 When David did not answer , she went on : ‘ After all , I suspect that you know him far better than I have ever done . ’
15 Perhaps because I knew from an early age that he was not long for this world , I tried to make his time in it as pleasant as possible , and thus ended up treating him far better than most young boys treat their younger brothers .
16 DAVID went to sea and rose to command a naval ship ; after losing an arm in a naval battle , he was offered but refused a knighthood ; in his book Memorials of Ochiltree , David Ramsay says that when David 's brother James Tennant asked why he had refused the honour , he replied , ‘ Deed , Jamie , I just considered it little better than a nickname . ’
17 I liked it far better than this North Africa , which is more ‘ civilised ’ and cultivated .
18 She had seen his point of view and expressed it even better than he did .
19 ‘ Although Victoria Sanchez would do it even better than I would . ’
20 And yet I know it almost better than my own street .
21 Two members of the band posed with a laughing Mr Brooke , who said : ‘ I know them considerably better than I did 15 minutes ago , ’ — but he declined to offer a rendition of any of their songs .
22 He ca n't behave or think or speak or do anything else better than I can — nearly as well as I can — so he 's going to be the Old Man of the Sea until I shake him off somehow .
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