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

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1 The bureaucrat is assumed as a general rule to know more than the sponsor about factor costs and production processes involved in the bureau 's services .
2 Even with Sackville 's favour Bowyer failed to secure more than the reversion in 1597 to the clerkship of the parliaments , the successful candidate averring that he was unfit ‘ by reason of a great imperfection he hath in his speech ’ .
3 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 .
4 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 .
5 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 .
6 But there are too few projects like Cleevedon , and too little money to help more than a handful of youngsters every year .
7 The thirty-four acre farm is expected to fetch more than a quarter of a million pounds .
8 German law does not allow charities to put more than a quarter of their donations into a reserve .
9 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 .
10 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 .
11 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 .
12 EYE patients at Darlington Memorial Hospital are having to wait more than a year for an appointment with a specialist , it has been claimed .
13 MORE eye patients at Darlington Memorial Hospital are having to wait more than a year for an appointment with a specialist , it has been claimed .
14 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 .
15 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 .
16 Given time available to train new staff it is not necessary to keep more than a nucleus in that particular expertise .
17 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 .
18 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 ?
19 It is not possible to withdraw more than the amount in the account so you avoid any risk of running up an overdraft .
20 I find it hard to raise more than a flicker of interest about who killed whom and why .
21 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 .
22 For instance , a concert attracting 70,000 at Wembley would have to pay more than a gig at the sock and Warthog in the High street .
23 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 .
24 The men are too tired , the women too remote from the issues of the day , to offer more than a commentary on the quiche or a flirtatious skirmish .
25 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 .
26 Yet Stolypin proved unable to enact more than a fraction of the measures he proposed .
27 No other man had ever been able to arouse more than a tingle of interest in her .
28 He did n't like to spend more than a week at it .
29 Nigel Kennedy 's been known to spend more than an hour in the shop after a game , on one visit he spent four hundred pounds .
30 to spend more than an average of 90 days per year in the UK for four consecutive tax years
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