Example sentences of "has more do with [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 At present their sound has more to do with youthful enthusiasm than finesse .
2 ‘ Swan Lake has more to do with pelvic thrust than an arabesque , ’ he wrote .
3 Others agreed that there is a negative image but it is within the N.I.O. and the job creation agencies and has more to do with political prejudice than anything else .
4 The day I was there , all the children were boys , but this apparently has more to do with French culture than computer culture .
5 Demands for licences grew steadily during the fourteenth century , but endowment of the religious orders never regained its earlier level , and alienations were increasingly directed to the establishment of chantries and secular institutions ; by mid-century almost as many licences were for the secular as for the religious churches , but this has more to do with declining enthusiasm for the vastly endowed monastic orders and the growing popular appeal of the mendicants who lived from alms , and not from farming extensive estates .
6 These interventions are surgically effective , and their removal from the list of services has more to do with social judgments .
7 When sexual response in older people is reduced it has more to do with social factors such as the absence of a partner ; health problems , particularly relating to cardiovascular disease , diabetes , multiple sclerosis and prostrate troubles ; drug side-effects ( many drugs prescribed to older people can have adverse effects on sexual functioning ) ; and the intolerance of social attitudes towards sexual activity in older people , which consider sex to be the province of younger people and that older people make rather ridiculous lovers .
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