Example sentences of "[vb past] [adj] than the [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 He preferred the slow , peaceful life of the Devon countryside to the frenetic bustle of the metropolis : playing for Exeter seemed better than the likelihood of being very small fish in the big Arsenal pool .
2 What has happened is a swings-and-roundabouts operation , whereby last year pensioners received more than the cost of living that they had incurred , whereas this year they will receive less .
3 We conclude that the CL100 gene and its mouse homologue represent a new subclass of mammalian PTPase in that they show no significant similarity to any human PTPase yet discovered other than the presence of the highly conserved active-site sequence .
4 With these decisions Darwin became more than the protégé of Lyell .
5 They were , in the eyes of many people , ‘ primarily teaching institutions ’ , second-chance institutions , concerned more than the universities with the applications of knowledge .
6 Some then went off to the latrines behind the back of the hall , which Charlie thought smelled worse than the middle of Whitechapel Road on a steaming summer 's day .
7 But it never seemed right ; she would kiss him , for not very long , at the end of each meeting , and he could hold her , feel his arms around her narrow back , his body briefly against hers , but he could feel her tense if his hands went lower than the small of her back , and when he tried to kiss her more deeply , or hold her tighter , she would break away , shaking her head .
8 This meant more than the elimination of exploitation , which had already been achieved in the Stalinist period : it meant the elimination of the oppression of man by man , which could be achieved only by the working class itself and not by a bureaucracy on its behalf .
9 Now , Harry was certain , Cornelius meant more than the length of time a middle-aged man should give himself to recover from influenza .
10 At stake lay more than the future of the English garrison in the town which the French were besieging and blockading by land and sea .
11 As a friend with three children at public school put it , ‘ My last term 's bills totalled more than the price of the wife 's new care ’ .
12 Also , despite what had occurred in the past between them , SHe needed Cab so badly now it hurt more than the bruises in hir belly .
13 ‘ He always looked stronger than the players around him .
14 This barrage was much closer and more concentrated , the shells passing over appeared lower than the shells from the Naval guns , and the noise more intense , the guns appeared to be firing from the bottom of the orchard .
15 It 's difficult to escape the conclusion that a great many of those questioned spoke less than the truth in their answers .
16 Such an eventuality — which no one who had studied the results of Irish elections could suppose to be quite improbable — would put us back to February 1974 , when Labour with 37.1% had fewer votes than the Conservatives with 37.9% , but with 301 seats won more than the Conservatives with 297 ; or to 1951 , when the Conservatives with 48.0% had fewer votes than Labour with 48.8% , but with 321 seats won more than labour with 295 .
17 Now , after some shrewd scavving and a touch of inventive accountancy , she had more than the price of the pudding .
18 And to say as much — to think as much — was to admit religion , to admit that life held more than the grave at the end of it , to admit that there was a spirit which transcended the poor imperfect flesh .
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