Example sentences of "[conj] go [adv] [adv] than " in BNC.

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1 Actually Pickerage and I have a relationship that goes much deeper than your grubby little mind could encompass , Quigly . ’
2 With these ideas , in concrete mathematical form , it was relatively straightforward to calculate the allowed orbits in more complicated atoms and even in molecules , which are made up of a number of atoms held together by electrons in orbits that go round more than one nucleus .
3 With a stab of pain that went far deeper than mere physical agony Merrill felt the electric charge of his touch surge through her .
4 The current , soon to retire , director of the Association , who came with me to meet him had been in London for a meeting of the environmental advisory group for and so he was having a taxi to Kings Cross which I jumped into too and got dropped off at Goodge Street , right outside the door of my next ( Industrial Editors ) meeting with just a few minutes to spare , so that went more smoothly than one might have ever dreamt or hoped for .
5 This chapter is relatively succinct and goes little further than identifying the major ideas concerning classification theory that have emerged during the twentieth century and before , and indicating their applications .
6 I delighted to know that the Medau Society is flourishing and going more strongly than ever in its fortieth year .
7 And I 'd just seen a colleague come and go in less than three months …
8 Without the leadership of such a party , the proletariat would be subordinate to bourgeois ideology , accept the premises of capitalism , and go no further than trade-unionism .
9 The former Home Secretary took common ground with Mrs Thatcher in opposing a Brussels-dominated and economically illiberal ‘ Fortress Europe ’ and went much further than Mr Lawson or the pro-European cabinet majority in calling for a central bank on the looser American rather than Bundesbank model .
10 And , in the Franks Report on ministerial handling of the conflict , we have an archive which not only shortens dramatically the interval before the normal release of classified information but goes considerably further than any disclosures at the end of the statutory thirty years in the amount of intelligence material displayed .
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