Example sentences of "[v-ing] more than [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Medical care outside the hospitals grew in importance in the second half of the century , becoming more than the prerogative of the rich .
2 Another member , Bernard Edwards , entered for the second time with his partner Steve Kenning and achieved the excellent time of 2 hours 34 minutes and a few seconds , knocking more than a quarter of an hour off their time last year .
3 I walked down the aisle , sobbing uncontrollably , in a cream Wallis suit with hand-made replacement buttons costing more than the suit .
4 With a pair of macaws fetching up to £10 000 and with an ounce of ground rhinoceros horn costing more than an ounce of gold in Asian medicine shops , the stakes are high .
5 When the dark blue uniforms of a sergeant and constable appeared in the doorway , they stood out like sore thumbs , causing more than a ripple of interest from the somewhat less than friendly clientele .
6 Arkwright certainly picked a great spot for his country residence : south facing and above a lazy curve in the river , with the high cliff opposite guaranteeing more than a modicum of privacy , and only five minutes from work !
7 Both sides are gambling because the defendant may be paying more than a judge would award at trial .
8 At regional level the western states have for months managed to wriggle out of paying more than a fraction of the growing unity bill .
9 At the end of September 143 people had been waiting more than a year .
10 The authority aim to cut the number of patients waiting more than a year , and meet the national target of no patients waiting more than two years .
11 ‘ Numbers waiting more than a year have already been significantly reduced from 367 to 293 at the end of January , ’ said Mr Flook .
12 And borrowers suffering from ‘ negative euqity ’ — owing more than the house is now worth — might do well to maintain their current monthly payments .
13 ‘ County ’ men were transferred around at short intervals , while we were static in the city , never moving more than a mile or so between the three divisions to undertake real ‘ city work ’ .
14 After a show in Groningen , several complained and the next night they played a mammoth set lasting more than a hour , boasting four encores .
15 Temporary jobs lasting more than a week can be considered in terms of whether they open or reopen rights to Unemployment Benefit .
16 And in a speech lasting more than an hour , he accused the Republicans of lying to keep the power , prestige and perks of presidency .
17 Such ideas have probably influenced the process of teaching more than the content of courses in higher education , although they had a direct bearing on the original terms of reference of university extra-mural departments .
18 But the team who led the table with an eight-point lead over the third-placed club in February and had two games in hand are surely lacking more than the rub of the green .
19 ‘ With actresses you 're getting more than a face — a character and a personality as well . ’
20 ‘ There were times when Sid James sowed dissatisfaction among the other artists by claiming that he was getting more than the others .
21 There is always some moisture around , many rocks containing more than a gram of water either crystallised or trapped in the spaces between the rock 's atoms .
22 Alex Miller 's team asked no questions of a drastically altered Ibrox side containing more than a smattering of Rangers ' impressive reserve strength .
23 Yes , we still have to use a printer to produce the newsletter , printing more than a handful form a laser printer simply is n't an economical proposition .
24 The results for those universities producing more than a total of 10 theses on Scottish geology between 1960 and 1983 are shown ranked as Table 5 — Changes in proportion of Scottish geology theses with time .
25 As a result , the creditor bank is affected by the unconscionable actions of the husband and will be restrained from recovering more than the £60,000 which they have already received .
26 Given his many commitments and the preparations for the new play , his second , The Family Reunion , on which he probably worked harder than on any other — it was understandable that he could not consider sparing more than an evening away .
27 The last leg of the expedition was proving more than a trial for the young naturalist .
28 Notions of what it means to read are much more diverse , encompassing more than a judgement on the text , and always referring to an interplay between text and the discursive space in which judgements about it are formed .
29 The time-consuming nature of Janet 's part in the process , combined with a bad back which prevents her spending more than a couple of hours at the drawing board every day , means she can not keep up with her husband 's prolific output .
30 The report also warns drinkers to expect big differences in prices between locals in the same town , with upmarket pubs in prime locations charging more than a no-frills bar on the outskirts .
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