Example sentences of "[adj] [conj] [art] mere [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 But it is clear that the mere existence of an alternative remedy does not oust judicial review .
2 By comparing the history of Northern Ireland with that of the rest of the United Kingdom it is clear that the mere fact of elections is not sufficient .
3 They are extremely special , are produced at great cost , and it is doubtful that the mere pleasure their harmony gives to a selected happy few is worth such large public expenditure .
4 It is doubtful whether a mere counterparty should be treated as a customer .
5 Atheism for Marxism is not an optional extra or a mere facet but the very essence of it .
6 She paid her ten pence at the glass cage of the entrance booth , to a young man who could not possibly be the custodian , Great-Uncle Alan 's contemporary , but was clearly something rather more scholarly than a mere gate-keeper .
7 Indeed , it is arguable that the mere possession of nuclear weapons threatens legality given the measures apparently needed to preserve security and suppress protests depicted in part III of this volume .
8 Scents are too evocative and the merest whiff jerks me back to that first night away from my wife , and to the feeling I had then .
9 But it is not likely that the mere provision of information would necessarily alter sentencers ' practices .
10 I believe Trade Unions recognised that there was more to the Bank Dispute in 1992 than a mere Salary Issue .
11 It would seem that our capacity to feel fear is great and the merest trigger can set it off .
12 As the music powered into focus , it suddenly seemed much more than a mere backdrop for Morrissey 's lyrical diatribes .
13 This is more than a mere measure of the offensive character in question .
14 In practice , it proved to be more than a mere truce after two decades of mutual and unbridled hostility .
15 Harsh and angry with undercurrents of lovelorn bitterness , but you ca n't imagine them amounting to more than a mere outlet for crowd frustration .
16 Yet , a number of democratic constitutions today contain more than a mere organisation chart of functions and powers ; they contain Bills of Rights , which may also include a charter of social and economic rights , something characteristic of constitutions of the twentieth century , although generally honoured more in the breach than in the observance .
17 However , since it is more than a mere sign , it partakes of the reality it signifies and is a means of grace through which the atoning work of Christ is made effective in the life of the Christian .
18 ‘ poeticity ’ , he says , is like oil in cooking ; you can not have it on its own but when it is used with other food it is more than a mere addition .
19 ‘ The fact that , after five years of separation , I 'm still married to Ross is nothing more than a mere technicality ! ’
20 Civilization had to be more than a mere confluence of economic interests : ‘ And until we set in order our own crazy economic and financial systems , to say nothing of our philosophy of life , can we be sure that our helping hands to the barbarian and the savage will be any more desirable than the embrace of the leper ? ’
21 More than a mere friend , I hope .
22 Today likewise Piraeus ' importance makes it much more than a mere annex of Athens and it has its own political traditions , regularly voting communist .
23 This is something more than a mere disturbance of the public calm or quiet but it appears that in the context of public order , the element of violence deemed essential in R. v. Howell ( C.A. , 1982 ) , in relation to powers of summary arrest , has not always been required .
24 They treat Scotland as no more than a mere appendage of England , and seek to impose on Scotland an educational agenda that is irrelevant to the real needs of Scottish education .
25 Admit you want more than a mere boy can offer .
26 The organizational separateness and distinctiveness of the state makes it much more than a mere mirror of , or passive receptacle for , the demands of society .
27 ‘ Or you risk more than a mere snub . ’
28 But most killers are not homicidal maniacs and the victim contributes much more than a mere coincidence of time and place to his own fate .
29 No doubt it appealed to his vanity and his ambition to be regarded as more than a mere fiddler ; but after a harrowing year it must have been a decision he bitterly regretted .
30 But the declaration issued by the congress left no doubt that the decision was intended to be more than a mere facelift : ‘ The present concept of socialism , the Stalinist system , has exhausted all its social , economic , political and moral reserves , and has proved unsuitable for keeping pace with global developments .
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