Example sentences of "was [adv] [det] than [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | I was saying that the proportion of advertising expenditure given was for that in the two lowest tar groups , which was rather less than the proportion of total sales . |
2 | And that was rather less than the effect these fashion fancies had on Third World local economies . |
3 | Yet , unlike the middle class , the worker was rarely more than a hair 's breadth removed from the pauper , and insecurity was therefore constant and real . |
4 | It was obviously more than a weed or even a wild flower so I did a quick turn-round and decided that it was quite pretty with its two-tone yellow tubular flowers and ferny leaves . |
5 | It was perhaps more than the chill air that flushed the parson 's cheeks as he bent to fasten his skates . |
6 | But Lij Yasu 's partiality for Islam was apparently more than a question of convenience . |
7 | And her beauty was already more than a promise . |
8 | Clive was already less than a ghost , less than a memory . |
9 | And his will was that the slave , the young man who was scarcely more than a boy , should somehow die for his brief moment of rebellion . |
10 | THE audience that turned up for the recital of British violin sonatas was scarcely more than a sprinkling , which made one despair of our unadventurous public . |
11 | If Labour offered only a feeble challenge , the Alliance was scarcely more than a rabble . |
12 | One may doubt whether this was ever more than a schoolboy game . |
13 | There was always more than a hint , of course , that the real source of anxiety was that the bicycle might be enlarging the freedom of women in undesirable directions , because both in terms of class and sex the bicycle was a great leveller . |
14 | Alina peered toward the lake , which was hardly more than a sliver on the horizon . |
15 | It was hardly more than a flicker in the eyes , but suddenly Ruth felt she glimpsed Adam again , her own brother , looking out at her desperately . |
16 | The inquest was hardly more than a formality , the verdict an inevitability . |
17 | Vine Street itself appeared to be a short cul-de-sac that was hardly more than an alley , and mostly dominated along one side by the towering rear facade of some big hotel . |
18 | Their pay , expressed in pence per 1000 ens , varied , but was still less than a man 's . |
19 | Over a long period then , the cost of elections was still more than the cost of the permanent organization , and this cost was so great as to rule out all but a tiny minority . |
20 | She was clearly more than a shop assistant . |
21 | The plants were moved to chilling temperatures for a fairly short time , and any resulting decline in growth was probably less than the variation . |
22 | In fact it was slightly less than a minute . |
23 | A cyclo-oxygenase inhibitor , indomethacin , also significantly decreased the chemiluminescence signal but the magnitude ( -34% ) was substantially less than the effects of either azide or catalase ( Fig 6 ) . |
24 | When capital allowances were available for expenditure on plant and equipment and industrial buildings , the cost of a lease was often less than the cost of financing debt to acquire the asset , because the lessor was able to utilize the tax benefits more effectively than the lessor . |
25 | The contrast with chemistry came up frequently , and there was often more than a hint of reductionism in the comparison : |
26 | And people in arrears who had bought at the top of the market could n't sell as their outstanding loan was often more than the value of their property . |
27 | The adoption of the name ScotRail by the Scottish Region was far more than a marketing ploy . |
28 | The reef was now less than a quarter of a mile away . |
29 | But it was surely more than a matter of stylistic fashion which prompted the Jesuit scholar Fr J. H. Pollen to preface his very useful collection of sources for the Babington Plot of 1586 , designed to kill Elizabeth , published in 1922 , with statements such as ‘ The interest attaching to Queen Mary 's wonderful personality is so great , that when she is taken away , all else seems to fade into insignificance . ’ |
30 | For Abie this Friday meant something special ; there was even more than the Sabbath to return to . |