Example sentences of "[to-vb] more [conj] [art] [noun sg] of " in BNC.

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1 In the area of booking contracts a form of damages has developed which may enable the guest to obtain more than the value of the contract .
2 It was particularly galling for the greens to see themselves overtaken by the extreme right National Front , which was being credited last night with 12.5 per cent of the vote but was not expected to win more than a couple of seats .
3 His band of defectors , called the Socialist Janata Dal , can not hope to win more than a handful of seats in the coming general election .
4 But there are too few projects like Cleevedon , and too little money to help more than a handful of youngsters every year .
5 The thirty-four acre farm is expected to fetch more than a quarter of a million pounds .
6 German law does not allow charities to put more than a quarter of their donations into a reserve .
7 Rich countries should accept that they do not have , and never will have , facilities to recycle more than a fraction of the rubbish they create .
8 The ever-familiar profile seems to derive more than a smidgeon of alternative inspiration from Aria 's Magna-series , as in fact does the whole bass .
9 Easing the car into first gear , she set off back along the road , a frown deepening on her face as she was forced to crawl along at a snail 's pace , unable to see more than a couple of feet ahead in the ever-thickening snow .
10 Mr Barnes said that trading was ‘ holding up well ’ in Britain , particularly at the company 's new restaurants , but that the whole country would not be able to accommodate more than a total of 12 restaurants .
11 In 1989 Brazil faced a critical shortage of fuel alcohol , used to run more than a quarter of passenger cars , because the rise in demand ( 48 per cent since 1985 ) could not be met by the stagnating production of sugar cane .
12 In Britain they failed to convert more than a faction of the Labour party , which was outvoted the year after it won its victory at the party conference .
13 Her children were both obviously too little to understand more than the tone of her voice , and as she dressed them to go out with her to the shops she was saying " and when Daddy comes home , we 'll show him , shall we ?
14 I find it hard to raise more than a flicker of interest about who killed whom and why .
15 This was illustrated most illuminatingly by a recent study in which a group of people were asked to eat more than a pound of potatoes each day ( baked in their skins , not fried ) in addition to whatever other food they could manage to eat .
16 Biggs is of the opinion that Mason would be unlikely to survive more than a couple of rounds against the world heavyweight champion and at this stage it would be unwise to even think of him as a genuine contender .
17 And occasionally , as now , it so happened that duty and pleasure would fall together in a sweet coincidence ; and from Parson 's Pleasure , after dutifully forbidding Lewis to linger more than a couple of hours or so , Morse himself departed .
18 Yet Stolypin proved unable to enact more than a fraction of the measures he proposed .
19 No other man had ever been able to arouse more than a tingle of interest in her .
20 to spend more than an average of 90 days per year in the UK for four consecutive tax years
21 The enlightened bureaucrats who were primarily responsible for drawing up the legislation of 1861 may not have achieved everything for which they were striving , but they were undoubtedly trying to achieve more than the modernization of the gentry 's sources of income or the revivification of the state machine .
22 Whether or not we accept the particular characterization offered by opponent-process theory , it seems that conditioned suppression training is likely to involve more than the formation of a CS-shock association .
23 Oxygen travels by means of billions of collisions of gas particles , a process that would be too slow if the molecules had to travel more than a fraction of an inch .
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