Example sentences of "more of [art] [adj] [conj] a " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | More of a revolutionary than a reformer . ’ |
2 | I suppose this is more of a forewarning than a request for permission , as I was going to send them this week anyway . |
3 | In the last interview he gave to a French journalist before the war began , Ho , in envisaging the way in which ‘ at all costs war must be averted ’ , seemed to accept independence within the French Union ; although unless this was based on a total misunderstanding of the nature of the French Union , which also seems unlikely , this was probably more of a smoke-screen than a smoke-signal . |
4 | It is more of a cabal than a cabinet , more of a permanent diplomatic conference than a senate . |
5 | Her Majesty 's Inspectorate of Schools is more of a lap-dog than a rottweiler . |
6 | Their concept of support was also very broad , and their assessment more of a quantitive than a qualitive one . |
7 | The researcher engaged in the social study of baptism may well decide at an early stage of the study that in modern British society baptism is more of a social than a religious ceremony . |
8 | International Relations began — and , many would say , remains — more of an inter-discipline than a discipline . |
9 | The sight of such an expanse of tiny squares , flowing up and around his massive elevation , produced more of an architectural than a sartorial impression . |
10 | A Santa Monica health club is so far the only place where Americans can switch E for O. In Hungary , however , such matters are more of an imperative than a luxury ; over 10 per cent of the country 's deaths are pollution-related . |