Example sentences of "[adv] [adj -er] [noun sg] in [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Longer , or more frequent , exercise sessions produce little further improvement in fitness level , but do produce an increase in risk of musculoskeletal abnormalities . |
2 | A somewhat simpler circuit in Fig. 3 eliminates the amplifier and two resistors , the gain being ( formula provided ) but two low-impedance references are now needed , since high-impedance ones introduce distortion . |
3 | Entropies of stacking are much more adverse for the GC stack than for the AU , such that the difference in free energy of stacking between the two types of interactions is only 11.4 kJ mol -1 despite the much larger difference in exothermicity . |
4 | He believed he needed a much better hospital in order to be cured . |
5 | As a result the proposed Cordillera autonomous region would consist solely of Ifugao , the only province voting in favour of autonomy , three other provinces — Benguet , Abra and Kalinga-Apayao — voting heavily against , with a much closer result in Mountain Province . |
6 | Formed in 1980 , it began by producing a newsletter ( Co-operative library media group newsletter ) to review programmes , list purchase details of presentations , report on trends , and emphasize the constant need for a better exchange of ideas between librarians and commercial producers , and much closer co-operation in preparation of such programmes . |
7 | The young man nodded and scuttled off , returning a moment later with a much older man in tow . |
8 | A much smaller increase in premium where you loose your no claims bonus following an accident than with most other insurers . |
9 | In fact , as a true ‘ salvage man ’ ( a point well made in Giorgio Strehler 's production ) , he belongs to a much higher niche in creation , albeit hating Prospero 's forcible civilization or ( depending on one 's critical stance ) colonization of the island . |
10 | The process made for a much slower reduction in unemployment than elsewhere in the Yorkshire , Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire Coalfields , and there were fears of the industry being cut to 35,000–40,000 men , with the possible ending of mining in Scotland , Wales and the North East . |
11 | This analysis may also help to assess the extent to which the central contradiction in Anderson 's character , his apparently greater interest in football than his academic field of ethics , displays itself in conversation . |
12 | All these comments apply to boys ' schools : the girls ' schools represented a much wider variation in style , and in many cases offered ( deliberately ) only a modestly academic education . |
13 | 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 . |
14 | The decision is part of a much wider shift in government thinking , in which Mr Patten has clearly been given Cabinet permission to distance his own policy from that of predecessors , such as Michael Heseltine , and , to a lesser extent , Mr Ridley , now Trade and Industry Secretary , who believed that economic success depended on getting the planner off the backs of business and citizen alike . |
15 | But if they become a normal event , all papers prepared for Council will have to be written with a much wider audience in mind . |
16 | The availability of work at terminals just to the north led to a much greater increase in construction workers ( 82% compared with 18% ) in the western sector ( KW14.7 ) than in the eastern sector ( KW 14,8 ) , so that by 1981 their levels had become similar . |
17 | We would , therefore expect to see much greater lobbying in Congress than in the Commons , and so we do . |
18 | Indeed there is currently much greater utilisation in guidance and therapy . |
19 | The successful colonization of the land from the original marine environment not only necessitated the production of entirely new means of acquiring oxygen and supporting the weight of the body , but also exposed animals to habitats of much greater variability in temperature , humidity , and other conditions . |
20 | However , non-democratic corporatist forms have a much greater role in administration . |
21 | As there was much greater divergence in growth levels between conurbations and rural sub-regions than between the 11 constituent regions of the UK , the statistical performance of the regions is better understood and predicted by reference to their respective mixtures of conurbation and rural sub-regions than to their industrial structure . |
22 | Similarly , the range from low to high-mid ( in the case of ( Ε ) ) is reduced to a much narrower range in table 4.7 . |
23 | We speculate that individuals in category C have the same genotypic characteristics as those in categories A and B but are identified at a slightly later stage in disease progression . |
24 | But that was due more to slower growth in domestic demand — and hence slower growth in demand for German exports — on the part of its trading partners than to a big jump in German imports . |
25 | The cross is or slightly earlier date in origin and was the centre of a weekly market on Thursdays , for which a charter was granted in the 13th century . |
26 | ‘ The obvious symmetrical properties of sea shells indicate the operation of a far deeper principle in nature than previously thought , one that could have far reaching implications for Science in general . ’ |
27 | There have , for example , been 29 changes in the method of computing the unemployment figures since the present Government came to power , so that the total number of people out of work has fallen by a far greater amount in appearance than in reality . |
28 | Civilization is most commonly defined not as greater efficiency in crop-growing and manufacture , but precisely as the preservation of distance from these activities . |
29 | An example of regional differentiation within a country was Italy , where a strikingly sharper drop in fertility appeared in the north than in the south in these years . |
30 | It stems , therefore , from something primitive and far removed from almost everything else in the Old Testament , with the exception of an even stranger tale in Exodus 4.24–6 . |