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

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1 But it , too , addresses itself much more to feminism than to psychology .
2 We need to ensure that we get a ferry between Rathlin and Ballycastle which can operatate the whole year round and open the island much more to tourist traffic and economic development .
3 The comic admits the heady days of starring with Bo Derek are a thing of the past … though he says there 's still more to life than supermarket commercials .
4 AS HE HAD DONE after his return from Italy , Wolfgang settled down once more to life in Salzburg , mitigating the tedium of his official duties — albeit on improved terms — at the archbishop 's court with a clutch of compositions .
5 As the blood began once more to course through George 's legs , his muscles went into spasms of cramp , so that they needed to pause every few yards .
6 With nowhere but the limited Drigg dump near Sellafield for low-level waste , and nowhere at all for intermediate-level , the authorities turned once more to mainland Britain to find an acceptable ‘ long term ’ solution .
7 Although Frank obtained a first-class diploma from the College , he did not find an opening in farming and his thoughts turned once more to medicine for which his experiences at College led him to think he had an aptitude .
8 The thread eventually led him out once more to safety .
9 The revived activity made North Main Street wholesome once more to Boxer Sullivan .
10 But there 's far more to garlic than its wonderful taste .
11 The above indicates that there is far more to negotiating than sitting down opposite the other party and trying to bargain .
12 With the new device Henry could contribute far more to group meetings and to his own learning and development .
13 There is , of course , far more to entrepreneurship than systematic innovation : distinct entrepreneurial strategies , for example , and the principles of entrepreneurial management , which are needed equally in the established enterprise , the public service organization , and the new venture .
14 To make the book come even more to life , the author introduces hypothetical characters , the Sportsman , the Visitor and the Engineer , and it does not take much imagination to think of their behaviour in driving or road design .
15 Cultural evolution is many orders of magnitude faster than DNA-based evolution , which sets one even more to thinking of the idea of ‘ takeover ’ .
16 Clyde was not popular with some sections of the legal profession and of the press , which suggested that his appointment to high office was due more to birth and political influence than to legal talent .
17 However , I would suggest that this is due more to luck than judgement , having noticed that the nut has been heavily shimmed in order to raise it , compensating for string slots which are cut much too deeply .
18 However , the fall was due more to commodity price rises and the strength of the dollar than any concerted national effort .
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