Example sentences of "[verb] in more [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 And from the sale of the contents of the house , she could buy in more leather to keep the suppliers happy .
2 The second part , I thought might be useful to members in explaining in more detail what each of the schemes were about .
3 This is of course traumatic in itself and involves an interview with the Registrar which we will discuss in more detail in chapter 11 .
4 The first part of this chapter will discuss in more detail the three main problems of lexical access that were outlined in sections 2 and 3 of Chapter 2 .
5 Later chapters will pursue in more depth some of these issues , particularly those dealing with the type of work people will be doing in the future .
6 After he had sent off this AC/189 , Gen McCreery took steps to deal with the second signal he had received from Gen Keightley that morning , the 0.413 in which Keightley had reported in more detail on the imminent arrival in Austria of the 300,000 German and 200,000 Croat troops , and had asked for authorization to accept the surrender of these forces as " formed bodies " .
7 March had come in more lamb than lion , there were windflowers in the woods , and the first primroses , unburned by frost , undashed and unmired by further rain , were just opening .
8 Can you see it requires more in a static holding , this is building muscle power and you have to do things , and muscle can build it if , it c if you asked that those legs to do that every day they would get better at it , because what the body would then do would be build in more muscle fibre to cope with the job , so can you see it , what you ask the body to do , you 've got to ask it the right amount , not too much or else you damage and you 've got to ask it regularly and gradually increase it if you want to improve the muscle power .
9 In all , 30 companies contributed ; in addition to the 13 questionnaire replies , nine were prepared to speak on the telephone , of a total of 25 called , and eight were visited and interviewed in more detail .
10 Systems will simply not change as easily as Shapland and Hobbs seem to hope ; for police society is extremely conservative and masculine in outlook , and has long reflected the low esteem women are given in wider society , as I will describe in more detail in Chapter 4 .
11 In Britain , this used fuel with its lethal inventory is either carefully stored or sent for ‘ reprocessing ’ at the Sellafield plant in Cumbria , a procedure I shall describe in more detail later .
12 Such comments give some idea of what some academics understand by the idea of a disciplinary ‘ culture ’ , a notion which we will explore in more depth in Chapter 4 .
13 So Kelly and Sear have looked in more detail at the temperature changes following the handful of similar eruptions that have occurred since 1881 , when those detailed temperature records begin .
14 Description , interpretation and judgement are the subjects of separate chapters , where they are considered in more detail .
15 The advantage of our body clock is that it improves the way in which we fit into a rhythmic environment ( this was considered in more detail in Chapter 8 ) .
16 These influences are considered in more detail in Chapter 12 .
17 Only indigenous breeds are described , but the British Friesian has been so dominant in this country that its history is included here , though the Friesian and Holstein are considered in more detail in the Netherlands and North American sections .
18 These two aspects of development planning are complementary but separate ; they are considered in more detail in Chapter 8 .
19 The relationship of small mammal diversity , as reflected in prey diversity , to habitat richness is of greater significance in this respect , and this will be considered in more detail below in connection with species representation of small mammals in prey assemblages .
20 Conjoint therapy was considered in more detail in Chapter 5 .
21 These three groups will now be considered in more detail , although most attention will be paid to the first group because this includes by far the majority of self-injury cases .
22 These issues are taken up and considered in more detail in Part 3 .
23 All these matters will be considered in more detail in the next chapter .
24 Their side-effects can be different from those of alcohol , and are considered in more detail in Chapter 15 , but similarly they can be mistakenly classified and thereafter dismissed as part of the normal process of growing old .
25 This is considered in more detail in Chapter 3 .
26 This point will be considered in more detail in chapter 4 .
27 Our current evidence to explain the gender imbalance illustrated by the older age groups is very flimsy and is considered in more detail in Chapter 4 .
28 Second , at each age mortality rates are lower for women as compared with men ( this is considered in more detail below ) .
29 These developments are considered in more detail in the next chapter .
30 The sexual aspects of adult life are immensely varied and will be considered in more detail as we come to think of the client groups with which social workers deal .
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