Example sentences of "[adv] more [adj] [noun pl] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 In non-profit organizations , particularly in Type B , the stewardship accounts provide much more limited measures of performance .
2 A treatment cream will then help you to improve the condition to an acceptable level and I would certainly try all of these methods conscientiously before even considering the much more serious courses of action — injections or surgery .
3 Obtaining compliance will be as difficult as it always has been , but an international community which has used sanctions to encourage change in southern Africa should be able to tackle the much more serious issues of enforcement associated with climate change and international security .
4 The move towards much more efficient methods of heating like convector heaters right on through to central heating , so that you could use more just that back parlour where the cooker was that kept the place warm .
5 True schizophrenias , on the other hand , may not be possible to externalize in the same way because they lack the superego elements present in paranoia and because they represent much more radical breaks with reality .
6 Both surveys , however , suggested that redundancy , dismissals and even voluntary leaving were much more important reasons for entry into unemployment .
7 Dostoevsky 's home-made word does n't appear in Crime and Punishment ; it has been left behind ( unlike the mind that coined it ) in the much more theoretical Notes from Underground .
8 At the time he reached his last book , Human Knowledge , he had abandoned the claim that you could show that the world could be logically constructed out of sense experiences , and adopted a much more Kantian outlook , in which , while he erm said that all our inferences about the world must begin from sense experiences , all that the philosopher can do , is to make explicit the premises that are required in order to infer from the transitory data of my own experiences to the enduring existence of material things and the much more sophisticated kinds of existence which their minute constituents have .
9 They interpret this as showing that Beccaria , through his commitment to a social contract that accepted the necessity of the inequities and poverty resulting from private property , was forced to overlook these as much more plausible reasons for crime than his own .
10 Much more difficult problems of definition arise with creole varieties of English , including creoles of Caribbean origin .
11 The Outer Isles Fishery Training Scheme operated by the Department of Agriculture and Fisheries , and which was , in effect the pilot project for the very much more ambitious schemes of fishery development inaugurated by the Highlands and Islands Development Board , was dependent on funds contributed by the Macaulay ( Rhodesia ) Trust and the Highland Fund .
12 In addition to the crash tests required by the EC and other legislative bodies , Clio has passed a series of much more severe tests of safety for occupants .
13 Water-living animals , such as fish , molluscs , sea urchins and corals , are much more promising candidates for preservation .
14 Most agree that measures used in combination provide much more reliable indicators of performance .
15 Just as game fishermen find lure fishing for pike easy to relate to ( as opposed to the somewhat more delicate techniques with size 22 hooks ! ) , the coarse fisherman will find that his lure fishing tackle is perfectly suitable for sea fishing — within reason , of course .
16 Not only do some building societies produce greatly more advantageous accounts from time to time and neglect to alert their existing deposit holders , but they actively conceal the new arrangements .
17 Obviously more written statements of policy would help , and this the authors recommend : for both central and local government .
18 At that stage my priorities lay elsewhere , and to start playing with inhibitors seemed a diversion — when I have turned to using them , in the late eighties , as I shall describe in Chapter 10 , it was with rather more specific goals in mind .
19 Before turning to these matters , however , I shall use as my starting point the rather more advan-tageous conditions for executive leadership that exist in the United Kingdom .
20 The movie-buffish Sight And Sound magazine concluded solemnly that Catwoman and Batman shared ‘ the strangest S&M relationship in mainstream cinema ’ while the tabloids let out rather more energetic caterwauls of appreciation .
21 I received rather more satisfactory reactions at work .
22 We now go on to consider the rather more difficult cases of fall-rise and rise-fall tones .
23 Above all , librarians will have to become ever more skilful managers of information resources .
24 Cast in the unenviable role of responding to the ever more frequent appeals for help from Vienna , Norman Bentwich decided to see for himself what needed to be done .
25 The most obvious form of development is cognitive , in terms of the mastery of ever more complex forms of thinking and consciousness .
26 The Engineers School of Altdorf is a hive of invention and development where ever more complex weapons of war are created for the Imperial arsenals .
27 The English and Welsh , who look back on the year 1870 ( Forster 's Education Act ) as the effective starting point of a state system , were not the first in Europe to realise that a literate workforce would be needed to meet the ever more complex demands of industry .
28 With increased drainage and ploughing , drain-pipes become clogged with clay and silt , and surface ponding creates ever more difficult conditions for farming , and even the death of cereal crops .
29 And she does this by telling the stories of her different heroes in a series of ever more tense situations of suspense , situations where the outcome is fearfully doubtful .
30 This can be seen , they argue , in ever more direct forms of state intervention .
  Next page