Example sentences of "[det] more [noun sg] [conj] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 I did go for one short walk in the cool overcast , just along the beach to the south end of the island and back , then I stayed in and watched some more television when the rain came on , carried on a low wind , glummuttering against the window .
2 I sat by the fire and read the file twice , then I went back into the kitchen , made myself some more tea and a chicken sandwich and sat at the table , eating the sandwich and thinking about things .
3 Again , we are only really concerned with two intervals and their inversions , but it must be noticed that one is much more dissonant than the other .
4 The whole place stank of money : much more money than the singer could have earned at the Kitty Kat Club .
5 If a local authority has any matter to propose for the good of local government in general or for any particular section of local government , this should invariably be done through the appropriate local authority association , for if supported by the association it will carry much more weight than the proposal of a single local authority .
6 His response underlines how much more royalist than the king were some of his judges and how the dividing line between church and crown jurisdiction was under more pressure from the king 's subjects and agents than from the king himself or from any royal policy .
7 A word processor is so much more power than a typewriter you would n't believe it .
8 For example , the number of unconnected words we can hold in immediate memory is about the same as the number of unrelated digits , even though a word contains much more information than a digit .
9 On the other hand these accruals accounts have provided much more information than the cash accounts .
10 The study of non-verbal communication or body language is now receiving much more attention and the term ‘ kine ’ has been adopted for each ‘ unit ’ of body movement which transmits a message .
11 In fact , because of Police and Trade Union restrictions , a motor bus running in London is allowed very little more flexibility than a trolleybus .
12 The IMF is likely to refuse to lend any more money until the budget is settled , but the government hopes it will just about manage , helped by lower oil prices .
13 The matter came to the Chancery Division where B and L tried to obtain an injunction restraining the receivers from selling any more property until the question of the disputed remuneration had been settled ( see Rottenberg & Others v Monjack & Another , The Times , 2 July 1992 ) .
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