Example sentences of "[adv] more to [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Perhaps more to the point , he is a corrupt man .
2 We must also try to direct support much more to the specialist producers of high-quality British beef .
3 The subsequent White Paper , Legal Services : A Framework for the Future ( Cm 740 ) , adopted a different tone , referring rather more to the requirement for legal services to be responsive to clients ' needs than to notions of competition and the discipline of the market ; but in content the proposals actually gave little ground on key points .
4 Rather more to the point are questions like " Are unc equal ? "
5 CAN I thank Gadfly ( Echo January 29 ) for putting a face and name to me and providing some , albeit sarcastic , coverage in The Northern But there is a little more to the story than he implies .
6 Nevertheless , they are rarely used individually and to the exclusion of all other forms of communication , so they need to be considered all together ; each form of communication adding a little more to the message the horse is sending .
7 ‘ The figures of the heads are beautifully done , ’ noted Selby , ‘ [ and ] are quite sufficient to identify the species , [ but ] I wish he had added a little more to the letter press as not a single word is said about habits , a description of the plumage alone being given . ’
8 Let's think about the unsuccessful hospitals and , possibly more to the point , the unsuccessful ventures undertaken from time to time by otherwise efficient units .
9 Still more to the point is another essay in that volume , ‘ Mr Eliot s Solid Merit ’ ( originally in the New English Weekly for 12 July 1934 ) .
10 Still more to the point , were they welcomed by the Melians when they took over the existing settlement at Phylakopi ?
11 Broomhead shifted his position on the cart and urged his horse on once more to no effect .
12 The French now seemed fully committed once more to a future of European co-operation .
13 This discussion is continued in the next chapter where , after deriving the IS-LM model and considering the contribution of Keynes to economic theory and policy , we turn our attention once more to the monetarist challenge to Keynesian economics .
14 The Christocentric nature of his revelation is once more to the fore ; so is the characteristic Hebrew emphasis on knowledge leading to obedience .
15 Whilst the enemy had probed the positions the Jocks held , it had managed also to break through once more to the north .
16 The late autumn and winter again aggravated his emphysema and he looked tired and pale.Although he preferred to stay where he was , his doctor insisted that he travel once more to the sun for the worst of the winter , and at the end of 1960 the Eliots went to Jamaica .
17 ’ He bent his head once more to the pile of paper in his in-tray .
18 Leave the church and return once more to the W façade .
19 But it seemed Ace had n't finished with her yet , and soon she was incapable of any thought at all , rational or otherwise , as he took her once more to the edge of paradise .
20 Bonard bit his lip and turned his gaze once more to the horizon .
21 After a year or two of marriage ‘ men return once more to the company of their mates ’ .
22 Turning once more to the campaign surrounding The Little Red Schoolbook this point should become clear .
23 He brought our conversation to an end by alluding once more to the past ; and in comparing the difference between his present achievements and the tribulations that had led up to it ( though he did not put it quite like that ) , he appeared to coin on the Spot an Epigram which , so far as I know , he never committed to print but of which there are echoes in The Family Reunion .
24 Ian frowned and turned once more to the window .
25 The daemonic legions would march once more to the aid of their new allies .
26 Here , if you want something looking even halfway decent you 'll have to turn once more to the desktop publishing program .
27 Back at the table I was in crepuscular mood for a few minutes , then bent once more to the task of diverting the wedding guests .
28 Which brings us back once more to the web of words they have spun to entrap us .
29 Her eyes dropped once more to the boxer shorts as embarrassed colour rose to her cheeks .
30 His $100m purchase of shares in Newmont Mining , an American producer , from Sir James Goldsmith was worth far more to the gold market in terms of morale than a straightforward injection of fresh money .
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