Example sentences of "it [verb] a much [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The only significant difference that I have observed in the Best Bitter from Newcastle is that it has a much higher level of secondary fermentation in the cellar .
2 Your PC will allow you to save larger designs than this , as it has a much larger memory capacity .
3 The tastiest are the Norfolk Black , a small-breasted bird which is rare in this country ; and the bronze-feathered turkey ; not quite as good , although it has a much meatier breast .
4 And if treated correctly it has a much longer life than synthetics .
5 The Dodge is slightly ahead on fuel consumption — 22.2 compared with 18.9mpg — but it has a much smaller tank capacity .
6 It assumes a much freer flow of information and a much richer flow of information within the company , both between businesses and between corporate management and business-unit management … .
7 This alternative to the lecture is probably the most rewarding method of sharing knowledge , but it demands a much greater enthusiasm and interest by the student .
8 It throws a much colder light on those satisfaction ratings if , unlike in their relationships with their accountants , clients are basing them on just the service delivered during a one-off transaction .
9 The shorter half-life of 235 U results in it having a much lower abundance at present relative to 238 U. Because U and Th are believed to have similar distribution coefficients during mantle melting , a large fractionation in U/Pb is associated with change of similar magnitude in Th/Pb .
10 This is a particularly interesting finding from the point of view of prevention as it indicates a much larger risk group .
11 One thing about leadership through team work is that it puts a much greater emphasis on training for the purposes of delegation and the word that they use to describe that piece is empowerment .
12 It gives a much better fuel economy .
13 For instance , in the very first passage it gives a much better explanation of what all the excitement is about when a messenger arrives hotfoot telling of the habitual ‘ skirmish of wit ’ between Beatrice and Benedict provides the comedy with its starting-point , as in the play itself .
14 Standard English used to be restricted in this way : if we look at Standard English as an historical dialect , then we find that 200 years ago it had a much smaller number of speakers in England , and had nothing like the geographical spread it has nowadays .
15 If the United Kingdom were geographically more compact , or if it had a much smaller electorate and far fewer MPs to be elected , that might not prove very difficult .
16 It provides a much clearer image of the ‘ cherub-faced ’ boy than anything produced so far , though the features of the other boy remain indistinct .
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