Example sentences of "[art] much [adj -er] [noun sg] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The French , very wisely , make a distinction between ‘ instruction ’ , the acquisition of knowledge and ‘ education ’ , which produces well rounded human beings the much wider preparation for life .
2 I spoke about the much wider use of timetable motions .
3 The wrangle over airline stakes has already forced British Airways to rethink its plans , and the much wider argument over farm policies is still holding up the long-delayed Uruguay round of GATT talks on the further liberalisation of international trade .
4 At the present stage of development of US television , on the other hand , the schedules of the majority viewing channels ( and this is of course complicated by the much wider dissemination of cable ) are stripped in a way which concentrates particular genres and subgenres within the same time-slot : the competition is directed quite blatantly at the same demographic group or taste constituency , and , characteristically , for the network viewer , the choice is within genres and subgenres rather between them .
5 It is important to remember , though , that the production need not have been a full-time or permanent occupation , nor necessarily an urban-based activity , as the much wider pattern of small- and large-scale production demonstrates .
6 Yet they all certainly benefit from the much closer coordination of industry and finance , whether this is through preferential interest rates from a number of different banks or through the advisory functions of their main lenders .
7 Over-expression of Oct-1 decreased the level of expression driven by the HPV 16 motif whilst having no effect on the much higher level of expression driven by the HPV 6 motif and the extent of repression observed was dependent upon the degree of over-expression of Oct-1 ( Figure 6 ) .
8 After much haggling , approval was only obtained for those four out of the seven sets which could meet the much higher rate of return which would henceforth be applied to BR investment .
9 The finding that the gastrin concentration is similar in the H pylori positive and negative uraemic patients , despite the much higher rate of ammonia production in the former , is further evidence against the hypergastrinaemia being due to bacterial ammonia production .
10 This will cause a bad bounce and balloon if the ground is rough and , combined with the much higher touch down speed , may result in a broken glider .
11 What is new is the much greater degree of sophistication which is now necessary to produce the maximum revenue yield from each and every InterCity journey .
12 The much greater availability of contraception and safe abortion has made the consequences of sexual intercourse for women , in terms of unwanted children , much less likely .
13 This was perhaps partly due to distaste for all things Germanic but more to the greater strength of indigenous theories and to the much greater influence upon policy and administration of medical men , already strongly committed to the belief that the cleansing and improvement of the environment could substantially improve the condition and habits of the poor .
14 Thus a covenant in that form will not allow the tenant to take advantage of the much greater flexibility of use permitted by the Town and Country Planning ( Use Classes ) Order 1987 ( SI No 764 ) ( Brewers Co v Viewplan ) .
15 This is explained by the much greater propensity of IT specialists to carry on their studies ( three times more likely ) ;
16 Judgments in the House of Lords are always reserved , but in the much busier Court of Appeal many judgments are delivered extemporaneously after very brief deliberations .
17 The first was announced in a Practice Direction ( 1989 ) 1 WLR 281 , which provided for the much earlier delivery of skeleton arguments which would be studied by the judges before they sat to hear the appeal .
18 This would concur with the conclusions of reviews of the much larger literature on support and health which does not specifically consider the effects of stress .
19 The US International Trade Commission last week gave its final ruling that South Korean companies were dumping dynamic random access memory chips on the US market to the detriment of US chip manufacturers — although to the benefit of the much larger population of chip users and their customers : the Customs Service will therefore levy duties on the South Korean imports , which totalled $446 million in 1991 — duties of up to 11.45% will be levied on parts made by Hyundai Electronics Co , Goldstar Electron Co and Samsung Electronics Co .
20 The much larger group of semi- or unskilled working class DE readers , 33 per cent of the population , plumped overwhelming for three or four .
21 Entropies of stacking are much more adverse for the GC stack than for the AU , such that the difference in free energy of stacking between the two types of interactions is only 11.4 kJ mol -1 despite the much larger difference in exothermicity .
22 Due to the much poorer state of play areas throughout other parts of the district it may be some time before improvements can be achieved . ’
23 And the re-concentration of growth , and the much smaller impact of decline , in the south since the mid-'70s has been very much focused on the previously less industrialized regions ( and parts of regions ) .
24 The much smaller amount of work on older women represents them as in mourning for the same psychological characteristics .
25 The end result will be more information on asbestos roofing traced , but only by considering all of the documents listed under the much broader category of roofing .
26 It assumes a much freer flow of information and a much richer flow of information within the company , both between businesses and between corporate management and business-unit management … .
27 Leila was a much safer subject for consideration .
28 Clay soils , composed of very fine particles , have a much higher affinity for water than silty soils .
29 Buchanan is arguing that because of environmental pressures , and particularly because of changes in management technology and the need for flexibility , high performance requires organizations to combine flatter structures with a much higher degree of worker control .
30 To achieve these goals usually entails a much higher degree of centralization and a much more interventionist role for the government in focusing national resources .
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