Example sentences of "less [conj] [adv] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 In fact , it will buy 10 per cent less or only 90 per cent of what it would have when you originally made the money available to your debtor .
2 The difficulty is that , in order to give the results of the tests any meaning , we would then have to show other — less or more complex — skylines to the babies , and see how they reacted to those .
3 My spontaneous recoil from awareness of others ' troubles ( or of future danger to myself ) is no less or more natural than my impulse to sympathy or cruelty ( or to avoid or irrationally court danger ) when I do become aware ; it is as pointless to ask whether human nature is selfish or unselfish as whether it is improvident or far-sighted .
4 Never less than thoroughly fascinating , the production is dominated by Ian McKellen 's extraordinary Iago , a performance which feels like a shifting palimpsest of impersonations .
5 But Downes appeared not to hear the supplementary questions , and Dixon nodded to the constable who stood at the door , the latter now making for the canteen on a less than wholly specific mission .
6 This second relationship arose from an ingenious cover-up to a less than wholly honest piece of political self-enrichment .
7 This might involve representing their position ( abilities , preferences , intentions ) in a way that is less than completely honest , or even , perhaps , downright dishonest .
8 His interests and habits had been too strictly and personally framed for him to be anything less than completely reliant on them .
9 The HEARSAY project [ Erman et al , 1980 ] used this architecture and has proved to be highly influential ( albeit less than completely successful ) as an example of collaboration between different levels of processing .
10 If the red sunset was anything to go by , those rocks would really have their work cut out next day to be anything less than either hot or sunny .
11 Evaluation may be somewhat subjective and less than mathematically accurate , but it must be attempted if the desired cycle of planning , implementation appraisal and replanning is to achieve its object of providing even better and more relevant training within the library . ’
12 As in all business calculations , the cost of obtaining such information needs to be balanced against its benefits , ( and against the consequences of limiting the search to a point where the forecaster does not know whether the information foregone is more or less than marginally useful ) .
13 With a company which can make use of new technology , jobs are certainly put at risk by resisting , or less than enthusiastically supporting , new technology .
14 However , this suggests that it might be a good thing to prevent anyone being born who would be less than maximally happy ( on average , throughout his life ) since he would be lowering the average happiness by his existence .
15 These molecules , the ultimate source of information about what is going on at a specific time in a particular cell , are extremely labile chemically ( for example , to traces of alkaline detergent in less than scrupulously clean glassware ) and enzymatically ( to the ubiquitous ribonuclease ) .
16 To be fair , none of the players here is less than extremely competent , but there are moments when the piano tone appears monochrome or lacking in warmth .
17 Thus , while Tough 's work may provide some interesting ideas for dealing with functional aspects of spontaneous speech , it may be less than entirely satisfactory as a means of obtaining reliable and objective assessment information .
18 Such a move is less than entirely satisfactory because the relationship between the theory of competence and the data on which it is based ( ultimately intuitions about acceptability ) becomes abstract to a point where counter-examples to the theory may be explained away on an ad hoc basis , unless a systematic pragmatics has already been developed .
19 This satisfaction is relative , one or either may emerge less than entirely happy with the result .
20 If the flavour of his text so far is to be believed , Bozzy was as much a soldiering man as Coleridge , which is saying less than very little .
21 His playing is never less than very good , but he does occasionally tend to be a trifle straight-laced in the more contemplative works .
22 It had responsibility for two institutions within five miles of each other , both established for the same function and both less than half full .
23 Turning her head slightly she looked at the cut-glass decanter on the bedside table — it was a little less than half full , which meant that she had drunk three … no , four glasses of whisky at some time during the night .
24 are puzzled by the ice-house ; less than half full
25 The Z88 will send the XON character when the receive buffer has been cleared to less than half full .
26 However , there is theoretical evidence that the Martian exposure to asteroids was higher over the last few 1000 Ma than in more recent times , which scales the ages down such that all but the more heavily cratered terrain is less than about 2000 Ma old .
27 However , theoretical and experimental studies of the accretional processes show that it is unlikely that a body with the low mass of the Moon could have accreted in less than about 10 Ma .
28 Although , for the most part , we are not considering all alternatives , there is such a striking difference in this development for Pr greater than or less than about 10 that a single illustration would be inadequate .
29 Following the 86th OPEC Conference , Air Vice-Marshal Ginandjar Kartasasmita , the Indonesian Minister of Mines and Energy , commented on Nov. 30 that OPEC output in the first half of 1990 would probably be not less than about 22,500,000 bpd , and that the 22,086,000 bpd ceiling agreed for that period reflected a pragmatic approach which " assumed overproduction " .
30 All I can say at the moment is not less than about six hours , not more than a couple of days . "
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