Example sentences of "[det] [prep] a [noun] than " in BNC.

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1 He was very unbending , this young boss of hers — not even a smile , and his speech was more like that of a headmaster than a colleague .
2 The face was fine and a little gaunt , more that of a poet than a soldier .
3 ‘ I was there more as a minder than anything else , ’ he explained .
4 Like Anne , Maureen had often felt uneasy about Sarah 's relationship with Terry and thought that she seemed to regard him more as a brother than a lover .
5 At £110 Alfonzo is beyond most piggy-banks , so look on him more as an investment than a bedfellow .
6 But the role and powers proposed are less those of an ombudsman than of a commissar .
7 Perhaps the title led one to hope for more of a synthesis than is possible in the space .
8 This is soccer , BSkyB-style , more of a circus than a ‘ Whole new ball game ’ .
9 If ( and hopefully when ) you do finally quit , it may create more of a problem than if you gird your mental loins at the outset and make up your mind to do it first and foremost .
10 On the other hand , girls ' lack of femininity or their ‘ masculinity ’ may be seen as more of a problem than that of underachievement .
11 It was noted that the Hibbs contribution suggested that right-wing governments tended to see inflation as more of a problem than unemployment .
12 We found indications that homophonic phrases were more of a problem than had previously been thought .
13 Linda says : ‘ What David has gone through makes him more of a person than a lot of other people .
14 Kano regarded his judo as more of a sport than a fighting system .
15 AIESEC Debate : ‘ This house believes that a University degree is more of a hindrance than a help to a career in British industry . ’
16 However , he could also be a tiresome prankster and thus often more of a hindrance than a help about the house — Briggs tells of practical jokes such as ‘ blowing ashes over shelled oats spread out to dry ’ ( from The Fairies in Tradition and Literature ) .
17 Later that month the Union 's largest society , AIESEC , the international organisation for students of all subjects who are interested in business and management , organised a debate on the motion that ‘ This House believes that a university degree is more of a hindrance than a help to a career in British industry ’ .
18 But I thought that 'd be more of a hindrance than a help
19 Middle-class professional man ; solicitor perhaps ; denizen of pine-and-heather country ; pepper-and-salt tweeds ; a moustache hinting — perhaps fraudulently — at a military past ; a sensible wife ; perhaps a little boating at weekends ; more of a gin than a whisky man ; and so on ?
20 The trouble is that in England a tomato good enough to be eaten raw and unadorned is becoming a good deal more of a rarity than a ripe avocado , and nearly as elusive as a perfect fresh peach or purple fig .
21 It 's more of a noise than a sound sometimes , but in a way it 's how a proper bass should sound .
22 Speculation that its soldiers would attack the town of Pailin on the Thai border has died down , as it became clear that to hold Pailin would be more of a liability than an asset .
23 It is more of a liability than an amenity .
24 Soviet influence , moreover , was overwhelmingly concentrated among the poorest and least important countries in terms of population and GNP , whose support was often more of a liability than an asset ; the world 's major military and industrial powers , by contrast , were all allied or aligned with the United States .
25 Although he was one of her most enthusiastic supporters , Mrs Thatcher often found he was more of a liability than an asset .
26 This time I 'm seeing a woman , who is more of a therapist than an analyst ; I prefer this because the sessions are more conversational and practical and there is even a certain amount of role playing .
27 Zach was the only one who showed any real talent and he was more of a performer than an actor .
28 Judged on the attendance , the almost complete lack of sectarianism , the productive political discussion in the workshops , and the constructive criticism , the event was more of a success than we had ever dared hope for .
29 Shredding and slicing life , in Woolf 's view , menacing it with monotony and madness , in Lawrence 's , clocks provide for modernist fiction more of a threat than a sense of order and regularity .
30 Political neutrality , without which a militarily improved army was liable to prove more of a threat than a support to Spanish democracy , was quite another matter .
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