Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] more [adv] [subord] " in BNC.

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1 So I used to support Goldsmith 's views , perhaps rather more strongly than I actually should of done .
2 I shall seek to show clearly where the hon. Gentleman went wrong on public expenditure and how other nations , which are much more balanced , have been able to develop their real economies , their manufacturing bases and their wealth-creating processes so much more effectively than we have been able to do in the United Kingdom .
3 Lightweight boots with this construction are claimed to be cooler and less sweaty in hot weather , since they breathe so much more freely than leather boots .
4 The students who , in the training trials , heard the buzz half a second before the shock , jerked their finger back more consistently than those who had had a longer gap between the buzz and the shock during training , and they did so much more markedly than those who heard the buzz at the time of the shock or after it ( see Fig. 24.1 ) .
5 In New York , the visitor is drawn time and time again to the Frick Collection , where the opulent yet relaxed setting shows off the objects so much more sympathetically than the Disneyland-style ‘ period rooms ’ across the other side of Fifth Avenue .
6 This has resulted in a great deal of mutual education , and most would not want to worship together any more regularly than that !
7 They will do so ever more loudly as the organ attempts to drown their noise .
8 ‘ Not in so many words perhaps , ’ said Mark , ‘ but they do manage somehow to make their wants known and perhaps even more persistently than we do . ’
9 To me , it was just another place where I would be pushed around , perhaps even more violently than I had been before .
10 ‘ The Scots take the identity of their regiments perhaps even more seriously than the English and there is a clear case , on grounds of tradition and sentiment , to preserve the Royal Scots . ’
11 Low wages are conjoined , in this picture , with atrociously bad houses in which money is eaten away far more voraciously than would ever be thought conceivable in suburbia .
12 By mounting the diodes on diamond blocks , the heat generated at the base of the diode can be conducted away far more rapidly than by mounting it directly on a copper heat sink .
13 But in the event you washed ashore even more recently than I , you 'll be delighted to know that Viz is about farts , tits and gonads .
14 Possibly even more so than being the all singing , all dancing performer which made her a millionairess .
15 Beyond the slightest doubt the new technology is helping reshape politics here far more dramatically than pious talk of the ‘ socialist market economy ’ .
16 It turns out that the component in the venom of this snake that has such an effect binds to the muscle receptor on human muscle and other animals ' muscles , and it binds there much more tightly than the natural chemical transmitter , which is called estialcodine , thereby preventing the transmission of the nerve impulse to the muscle and gives the victim instant miocenia and presumably a nice meal for the snake in due time .
17 Maybe never more so than when she accompanied a group of cadets training for officership on a ten-day campaign in remote rural areas .
18 On occasion , strong political interest could push a young man forward much more rapidly than could have been for the good of the service .
19 On occasion the requests were intended to push a candidate forward much more rapidly than was normal .
20 But while the French did not feel encouraged to emigrate in large numbers , the 50,000 inhabitants of New France moved inland much more boldly than the Abbé Prevost might have made one expect .
21 Yeah , erm , right , yeah , that 's all the other items , erm what 's been er been going through my head recently is , is er the , looking at the pattern of the meetings and the way the meetings are arranged and , and how , erm , at the last meeting we had a speaker er and that I think , we all found that quite interesting and the one , one from Central America that things and I feel we ought to have that much more frequently than we do have er , a , either a speaker or a focus of some sort of meetings erm , so I think that 's something I 'd like to raise and get the A G M at the next meeting I think similar thing we ought to consider there .
22 But I 'm always reminded of a large bomber aircraft coming in to land , moving very much more slowly than you 'd expect for something of its size .
23 Perhaps most alarmingly of all from a Russian point of view , the population of these republics had been increasing very much more rapidly than the all-union average and on some projections was expected to account for 25–30 per cent of the total Soviet population by the end of the century ( the USSR was already the world 's fifth largest Muslim state ) .
24 He was very much more out than I was and he knew where the gay scene was , not only in Edinburgh but also in London .
25 The system co-opts others to join its ranks , and pays attention to some citizens very much more readily than others .
26 " I think our association will work very much more smoothly if we stay completely neutral business acquaintances . "
27 The great advantages of using a computer lie in its ability to select the records of specific kinds of people very much more quickly than is possible with a manual record system , and to extract and present information required in a wide variety of formats These two applications of a computer not only save a vast amount of time .
28 The newest waste disposers can handle up to I litre ( 2 pints ) of waste food at a time very much more quickly than the old bone-chilling ( and bone-crunching ) models .
29 In his study of The City of Worcester in the Sixteenth Century ( 1973 ) Dr Alan Dyer has shown that Worcester was far more reliant upon a single trade than most Elizabethan towns , certainly much more so than Leicester .
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