Example sentences of "[verb] a much wide [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The visits to the colleges provided a much wider perspective on the provision of accounting courses as opposed to the narrow single college viewpoint .
2 By bringing it out as an A-format , £4.99 , mass-market paperback we hope to attract a much wider readership .
3 However , as I suggested in Chapter 1 , the basic assumptions of Beccaria 's classical model suggest a much wider canvas .
4 But a decade later , French observers continued to lament the absence in most of the 12 other member-states of ESA of strong centralized and specialized space policy-making bodies such as the CNES : ‘ In Germany , the DFVLR covers a much wider sector than that of the CNES but does not exercise political responsibility ; in Britain , responsibility is dispersed among the end-users such as British Telecom . ’
5 For example , the width of the five grades is not consistent , and grade 3 not only accounts for about half the land , but also covers a much wider range of possibilities than , say , grade 1 ( Gilg , 1975a ) , and even the subsequent sub-division of grade 3 in the 1970s can not be applied objectively ( Worthington , 1982 ) .
6 This is a very personal book which covers a much wider field than the title suggests .
7 The Council of Europe covers a much wider area with a much greater population than that covered by the European Economic Community .
8 But this state of affairs can be achieved not only by people working within the prison system , but by activating and empowering a much wider spectrum of practitioners .
9 Rather the Report sought to present English as the principal means whereby the universities might both engage in and direct a much wider mission of national cultural renewal .
10 Originally developed as a means to ensure compliance with regulations , environmental auditing now has a much wider remit for many companies .
11 A text frequently has a much wider variety of interpretations imposed upon it by analysts studying it at their leisure , than would ever have been possible for the participants in the communicative interaction which gives rise to the ‘ text ’ .
12 Their conclusion has a much wider use , though , than on the soccer field .
13 As a direct result of the project , a much larger committee was established , where membership comprised a much wider representation of the staff as a whole .
14 Such industries are traditionally centred on oil and chemicals but increasingly cover a much wider spectrum including pharmaceuticals , food technology , bioengineering , nuclear engineering and many others .
15 The Hyades , extending from the bright orange star Aldebaran in Taurus ( the Bull ) cover a much wider area than the Pleiades , and are also somewhat overpowered by Aldebaran , which does not actually belong to the cluster at all , but merely happens to lie about midway between the Hyades and ourselves .
16 But yet there 's no doubt at all that despite the technical shortcomings of his work in subsequent judgement , erm Russell by this work became , I suppose , the main founder of modern logic , the main founder of this kind of logic which by the much more sophisticated symbolic apparatus erm is able to panelize a much wider range of logical phenomena , and hence to reveal the structure in a way which had not been possible before .
17 Using data from the 1983 Labour Force Survey , they show that whereas unemployment rates for non-manual workers are low , with little variation between regions , those for manual workers are much higher and exhibit a much wider degree of regional variation ( see columns 1 and 2 of table 8.3 ) .
18 But the Princeton theology has also had a much wider influence among more conservative Christians to the present day .
19 Certainly , Supreme Court judges are likely to have had a much wider variety of governmental and legal experience than their counterparts in Britain where the rather narrow process of socialization into the law and recruitment process seems to ensure less variation .
20 Thanks to the success of Darlington , BR is now poised to announce a much wider scheme covering much of the North-East network .
21 For this reason , both the GCSE and records of achievement are likely to require a much wider range of assessment techniques to be employed than was normal for more knowledge-based examinations , with oral and practical components figuring significantly .
22 In the UK , what initially began as a restructuring of the London Stock Exchange became a much wider cause , embracing every sector of the financial community .
23 Genette 's Narrative Discourse , by contrast , is able to include a much wider range of narrative elements and to use the linguistic analogy in the most flexible way .
24 Considerable difficulty , however , would be met in outlining the degree of sexual conduct which would amount to adultery , even if it were given a much wider connotation where homosexuals were involved .
25 We have raised it through the United Nations , and we see the United Nations as the primary focus for encouraging a much wider group of countries to sign the treaty and abide by it .
26 On Grosvenor : ‘ Displaying , without generous resources , the range of achievements of a good school — and accepting a much wider responsibility than most . ’
27 This was not entirely a semantic shift , and was to foreshadow a much wider change in attitude to the relationship between the state and the economy , which was to be felt throughout the 1980s .
28 Not only can they cover a much wider area than they could on their own , but their collective experience assists in finding food .
29 Rather than large , intrusive stations at long intervals we should see smaller , more frequent service areas providing a much wider range of facilities .
30 Because of its ability to store and manipulate far more detail than a manual system , a computerised information system is usually capable of providing a much wider range and variety of analyses ; without it , certain information will simply not be produced .
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