Example sentences of "[vb past] more than [art] [noun sg] of " in BNC.

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1 I do n't think Father played more than a couple of games of golf thereafter and he spent the next twenty years in pursuit of trout , salmon and sea-trout ; never happier than when he was waist-deep , regardless of time of year or weather .
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 Peacock scored more than a quarter of United 's goals last season — many of them from midfield .
4 This phenomenon is even more marked in the case of the SDP/Liberal Alliance : in 1983 it achieved more than a quarter of the votes cast in the general election , yet won only 3.5% of the seats in Parliament .
5 More important , James IV lived in what J. R. Hale has described as a new age — the age when European wars became more than a matter of ‘ violent housekeeping ’ .
6 With these decisions Darwin became more than the protégé of Lyell .
7 The Oxford-based charity Oxfam made more than a quarter of a million pounds last year from second-hand and home-made toys .
8 Some 16 per cent of trees lost more than a quarter of their leaves or needles last year , although Swiss forests are better off than their German neighbours , where the figure was 27 per cent [ see ED 65/66 ] .
9 With the engines as well , this train covered more than a quarter of a mile standing still .
10 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 .
11 Now , Harry was certain , Cornelius meant more than the length of time a middle-aged man should give himself to recover from influenza .
12 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 .
13 Zambia achieved political independence without a prolonged conflict , but in Zimbabwe it took more than a decade of military and political struggle to overthrow white minority rule .
14 It then took more than an hour of bathing and shampooing to get Tosh back to his natural ebony colour !
15 Branson 's standing joke that ‘ I believe in benevolent dictatorships — provided I 'm the dictator ’ contained more than a germ of truth .
16 Three people have been charged with handling stolen goods after police seized more than a quarter of million pounds worth of luxury cars hidden in farm buildings .
17 Typically , he will cite the film All the President 's Men as one of liberal Hollywood 's morale-sapping strikes at US institutions without ever noticing that Richard Milhous Nixon managed more than a bit of subverting on his own account .
18 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 ’ .
19 ‘ We estimate they brought more than a kilo of heroin into France . ’
20 They hardly spoke more than a couple of words in six months .
21 Neither side had more than a couple of scoring chances in the first half , and Ecchinswell took advantage of the first of these , breaking through after dispossessing Martin Whiddett on the sideline and finding a vast opening in the Alton defence .
22 ‘ We rarely had more than a couple of deliveries a day — we did n't have the space .
23 Much of James 's statement had more than a modicum of truth .
24 Their winner , an own goal from Nick Henry in the 13th minute , had more than a shade of good fortune about it .
25 At home he rarely had more than a piece of toast and marmalade for breakfast , but when he was away he ate the whole cooked breakfast .
26 These first three Muftis of the capital , as well as their immediate successors , never had more than a priority of rank over those of the provinces . "
27 Now , after some shrewd scavving and a touch of inventive accountancy , she had more than the price of the pudding .
28 Bernice thought she detected more than a suggestion of injured pride in his rigid stance .
29 ‘ It 's the TARDIS , ’ Ace replied , with a smile in which Defries detected more than a hint of malicious enjoyment of her audience 's incomprehension .
30 We thought we detected more than a hint of irony in this answer , and we suspected that they were smugglers .
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