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

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1 Certainly the Springbok squad for their tour of France and England has more than a touch of the curate 's egg about it .
2 Then too , Sun has more than a touch of the ‘ not invented here ’ syndrome .
3 The latest move to supply India , a country which exploded a nuclear device in 1974 with material produced from a research reactor , typifies France 's ‘ go it alone ’ approach which has more than a hint of economic expediency in it .
4 He could n't have had more than a couple of hours ' sleep .
5 The marriage lasted only a few years , cut short by the death of Eliza ; when Robert returned to the same altar at St Leonard 's in January of 1837 as a widower , he must have had more than a flash of déjà vu .
6 So if you 've more than a mite of sense you 'll point your base somewheres else .
7 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 .
8 ‘ We rarely had more than a couple of deliveries a day — we did n't have the space .
9 Much of James 's statement had more than a modicum of truth .
10 Their winner , an own goal from Nick Henry in the 13th minute , had more than a shade of good fortune about it .
11 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 .
12 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 . "
13 Now , after some shrewd scavving and a touch of inventive accountancy , she had more than the price of the pudding .
14 Though of course Müller-Claudius 's ‘ sample ’ was hardly a representative one , the responses have more than a ring of plausibility about them , and , coming from Nazis who had been in the Party since before Hitler 's ‘ seizure of power ’ , can be extended a fortiori to ‘ non-organized ’ Germans .
15 Its fine architecture decorated with giant banded pilasters have more than a hint of northern Mannerism in spite of the fact that they were finished as late as 1653 .
16 Some rankings have more than the approval of the author of a guide , and are attested by other authorities , local or even national .
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