Example sentences of "[adv] [conj] more [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | But people love SM58s for the way they interact ; the way the tone and dynamics change when you sing closer , more powerfully or more softly . |
2 | Feeling good about nothing specific is not , so to speak , an unattached or free-floating phenomenon , unpossessed or unhad. ( iv ) Finally , and clearly , all of the contents so far mentioned are different in character from those which get definition by way of language-or rather , get definition only or more explicitly by way of language . |
3 | They 're newer so that more easily adapt to what |
4 | More centrally , in the cerebral cortex the afferent fibres from groups of receptors are ‘ wired together ’ so that more complexly patterned stimuli — such as edges or lines of a certain inclination — may preferentially elicit neural activity and the corresponding subjective experience . |
5 | Now , with complex machines themselves capable of performing routine jobs , education concentrates to a great extent on equipping young men and women for life , and living better and more creatively . |
6 | What matters is to serve customers better and more profitably . |
7 | Each and every employee should look at what they do to see if it is possible to do it better and more consistently . |
8 | " … a guide for the medical practitioners of both tropical and temperate regions to the origins and diagnosis of infections that are tropical as opposed to being cosmopolitan , and of great value for training and teaching because it reproduces much better and more comprehensively than is possible with ordinary textbooks the appearance of specimens that will be examined … has been prepared with great care and deserves to remain one of the standard texts in the subject for many years . " |
9 | Some of this advice was put better and more fully by Mr A.D. Bonham-Carter . |
10 | Advantages : less money was tied up in machinery ; newer machinery did the job better and more quickly ; those hiring out machinery generated more income to the farm and could justify the expense of new machines ; there was employment for farmers ' sons in home locality . |
11 | Anyway , Jacob said that he could do the job better and more quickly if he paced himself by singing a lively hymn called ‘ Keep in Step with the Master ’ . |
12 | Not until they were drawing near to Moulden did she suddenly reopen , more gently and more directly , the subject of herself . |
13 | He had the feeling that Berowne was in some trouble deeper and more subtly disturbing than poison pen messages . |
14 | ‘ No , no ! ’ cried Mrs Crump and ‘ No , ’ once only and more thoughtfully , echoed Mr Crump . |
15 | When the movement was defeated , these opening doors of dialogue were closed again , obviously so by the conservative regime in Beijing , less obviously but more damagingly from outside . |
16 | It would take a teacher a great deal of time to prepare such graphs manually but more importantly the software allows pupils to manipulate it to discover aspects of pond life for themselves . |
17 | This is the detective novel or the crime novel which makes its comments on life through humour rather than more directly . |
18 | What was interesting in this study was that subjects ' eye movements showed that they looked longer and more frequently at syntactic errors even when they did not actually report the errors . |
19 | Through a large number of examples , the exhibition traces the history of adult comics and the latest developments which include something called the graphic novel longer and more substantially bound , but essentially the same format . |
20 | It would have been much more interesting I think , and more useful to an European audience , to look more broadly and more closely . |
21 | This can and does of course occur in many other churches too , but the new churches may find change occurs more easily and more quickly . |
22 | He had achieved it more easily and more quickly than ever he had expected . |
23 | So with humanism more generally and more radically : it is not to be imitated , not modified , not simply borrowed from or differently applied ; rather , its appropriation and transformation is conditional upon its negation , the using of it destructively against itself . |
24 | Schools were urged to recognise the importance of ascertaining pupils ' views both generally and more specifically in relation to the development of a behaviour policy by the school , and to instil a sense of ‘ belonging ’ amongst pupils . |
25 | Their plans have come to fruition rather sooner and more dramatically than expected . |
26 | I needed crews such as Middleton 's badly and more especially captains like Middleton , but I was aware there was a weakness and that weakness had to be reinforced . |
27 | The first is that deregulation has increased competition within and more recently between types of financial market and institution . |
28 | Williams , an Old Stopfordian then at Manchester University and the inventor of the " Manchester Automatic Sequence-Controlled Calculating Machine " ( widely and more succinctly known as the " Electronic Brain " ) — the first computer in the world with its own memory . |
29 | And if we can encourage them to do that er more effectively and more efficiently , then that 's all to the good . |
30 | In addition , the tutor can advise on alternative equipment or software which will perform the required functions more quickly or more effectively . |