Example sentences of "[det] more [conj] a " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Dreadful , ’ he replied , and warmed her heart some more when a hint of a smile touched his mouth , and he voiced , ‘ Allow me to tell you , Miss Kingsdale , that your interviewing technique is appalling . ’
2 Do not repeat this more than a couple of times in rapid succession however , because otherwise the dog may start to interpret this as a game .
3 Is this more than a mere technical exercise ?
4 It 's not much more than a broom cupboard , I know , but what do you think of it ? ’
5 Whereas the parachute keeps the cable under tension as it drops , if there is a cross wind it tends to drift much more than a rope with no chute .
6 In the absence of any corporate direction , BR 's excursion trains then were not much more than a mishmash of bright and not so bright ideas by divisional and area managers , which lost as much money as they made .
7 A concours Mk 1 will fetch much more than a ropy Mk 2 , perhaps six years ( and maybe 100,000 miles ) its junior .
8 All that emerges from it is the sheer nastiness of a group of homosexual writers for whom the working classes were not much more than a floating brothel .
9 For him a paper was much more than a published news-sheet .
10 One Sunday night at the Wood Green Odeon a group of youths and girls were making so much more than a tolerable racket that I eventually asked them to quieten down .
11 They 're justification for the ‘ he-man ’ tag , with heavy everything at low speeds and not much more than a token lightening up as you press on harder , but not so heavy as to wipe out the sports car 's essential touch of delicacy .
12 But , much more than a filmmaker like Hepworth , he had learnt to find stories that would have genuine popular appeal .
13 The Brundtland Commission may have made sustainable development the end-of-century watchword , defining it as ‘ development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs ’ , but even Tolba has wondered aloud whether it amounts to much more than a shibboleth .
14 Maybe , he 's told , he 's much more than a celebrity .
15 In fact the grouping was never much more than a rough guide .
16 The little round lawn with its grass path was so bitty that I was tempted to remove it altogether , and the two paved areas seemed too small to accommodate much more than a deckchair .
17 Mary had the chance to learn her trade as something much more than a queen consort from a politician of great skill and finesse .
18 On the opposite bank , not much more than a stream at this point , the hillside was thick with scrub hazel and thorn .
19 Ingolstadt was for some centuries the principal seat of the Bavarian dukes when Munich was not much more than a village .
20 Schmeichel is much more than a shot-stopper .
21 ‘ Highlander is much more than a place or an institution .
22 The error was to project the growth trends of the world economy from 1870 to 1914 and see the political order as not much more than a reflex of these trends .
23 Rulfo 's oral style — which manifests itself in this novel and in the stories of The Burning Plain , in the frequent repetition of words and phrases , in a manner typical of the backtracking of oral narrative — is , of course , much more than a formal device , for its function is to take us inside the world of a rural peasantry whose cultural tradition is non-literate .
24 Much more than a military commander , Pompey appointed kings and created new Roman provinces .
25 As we watched the train 's shadows turn and fold on the snowy shore , it became clear that she had not forgotten the stories which made this much more than a stark inland sea stretching as far as the eye can follow .
26 This is the point of view of one novice who discovered that diving offers much more than a free lunch , but should never be taken without tissues .
27 As the music powered into focus , it suddenly seemed much more than a mere backdrop for Morrissey 's lyrical diatribes .
28 It has already been stressed that the NACAB information system is very much more than a reference work .
29 But not much more than a vague impression of the early impact of the service is provided by these figures , for without an extensive number of regional studies , it is difficult to estimate either the local variations in the success rate or the extent to which different areas established SCC systems alongside the employment bureaux .
30 It is time that technical education remained not much more than a debating topic , although the Education Act 1918 , did make 14 the universal minimum leaving age and , far more controversial , it began to introduce compulsory part-time day continuation classes .
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