Example sentences of "more [adv] discuss [prep] " in BNC.

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1 There were significant changes in the services provided , but these are more properly discussed in Chapter 4 .
2 New teaching methods were more easily discussed in business studies or applied social science than in an area like engineering with an established body of knowledge and longer traditions of teaching .
3 All these and much more are likely to be discussed , and in some respects are more profitably discussed in groups than on an individual basis .
4 The authors say that this is a somewhat uncommon approach to the problem , as access to children in care is more often discussed in terms of the benefit to the parents .
5 Wordsworth 's later views on home affairs will be more appropriately discussed at the end of Chapter 2 .
6 No systematic attempt is made at this point to resolve the many doubts about the details of Hocazade 's career , particularly the dates of his various appointments , since his career impinges on those of a number of Muftis and the conflicts are more appropriately discussed in detail where they arise in these contexts .
7 In other cases , as we more fully discuss in chapter 5 , the use of NFI alternatives to capital transfers incur distinctly second-best solutions to the problem .
8 The only people who had trouble in adjusting to work were those who for some reason deviated from this model — either by going up the social scale or by going down it ( social mobility is more fully discussed by Geoff Payne in this volume ) .
9 This is more fully discussed in Chapter 8 .
10 Yet it should never be forgotten that some of the disquiet felt about institutional care ( more fully discussed in Chapter 7 ) has arisen from the ‘ scandals ’ of chronic wards in hospitals , in which long-term patients were , on occasion , subjected to degrading treatment .
11 Indeed , this sexual labelling had less to do with actual sexual practices than with the extent to which young women 's behaviour conformed to the popular ideas of ‘ femininity ’ — for instance by the use of swear words or loud behaviour , ( this is more fully discussed in Sue Lees , 1986 ) .
12 The official reaction to these changes ( more fully discussed in Chapter 9 ) has been to try and persuade farmers to adopt a more conservationist attitude , notably on unproductive land ( Leonard and Cobham , 1977 ) .
13 ( This will be more fully discussed in Chapter 7 ) .
14 This hypothesis ( originally proposed by Carroll and Bever , 1976 and Fodor , Bever and Garrett , 1974 , and more recently discussed by Marslen-Wilson , Tyler and Seidenberg , 1978 and Flores d'Arcais and Schreuder , 1983 ) has two main aspects .
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