Example sentences of "[is] more [adv] [verb] in [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | The third kind of relational information , that between speaker and bystander , is more rarely encoded in bystander honorifics . |
2 | The central strip is more firmly fixed in place by two or three panel pins . |
3 | The ideology of the three Thatcher governments is more clearly demonstrated in housing than in any other area of social policy . |
4 | The origin of such pruning is possibly associated with the discouragement of other invading ants , for it is more frequently found in ant species with stinging rather than other chemical defences . |
5 | This is particularly so in the case of course-integrated instruction and this ideal is more seldom reached in practice than course-related education . |
6 | Yet the interview , especially of the formal and standardised type in which questionnaires are used , is more commonly used in connection with survey research , which means that standardised interviews using questionnaires are the most frequently used social research technique . |
7 | This vicious circle is more precisely specified in Chapter 7 . |
8 | The condition is more appropriately treated in specialist addiction units . |
9 | Experience of these techniques has recently prompted Oldfield ( 1983b ) to propose a steady-state model of ecosystem change related to man 's impact on environment as an additional alternative to more familiar successional and cyclic models , and this is more appropriately considered in relation to other time-bound developments ( chapter 8 , p. 182 ) . |
10 | We may extend our analysis of urban-rural shift to these years , 1981–87 , by reference to Table 5.5 , which disaggregates the South and North of Great Britain further into types of districts , a breakdown that is more fully explained in Chapter 7 and utilized in Chapters 8 to 11 . |
11 | The issue of natural genius is more fully treated in chapter five below ; here , it is necessary to observe that Duck 's success was largely a consequence of the attention inevitably accorded to a prodigy of any description . |
12 | ( This theory is more fully described in Chapter 5 . ) |
13 | This is more fully discussed in Chapter 8 . |
14 | Section 56 is more fully considered in Chapter 22 ( para. 22–14 below ) . |