Example sentences of "[det] [det] than [art] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 The costs involved in astronomy satellites cover much more than the detectors or telescopes and even the cheapest astronomical satellite now costs around £60 million .
2 The sheep are not much more than the primroses .
3 Jason Burke discovered much more than the clichés of Paris , and decided that a short visit need not be too expensive .
4 I wanted a pay rise because I found out I was way behind most of the first-team lads and barely on much more than the apprentices ' wages .
5 Healthy eating is about much more than the kinds of food we eat .
6 Men and women work all day and at the end of the week those in waged work get a wage packet which does n't buy much more than the necessities of life .
7 No , but it was a loan to me and I said to my dad he was loaning it me and I said to him erm I pay you back and then when I went to pick the cheque up er he says er well me mum says he giving you that you know he says what we 're gon na do is when , when they write the will out you 'll get that much less than the others , I says well as long as it ai n't gon na cause any problems
8 No other species assemblages have such a disproportion , and for the most part the numbers of digested in situ incisors are either the same as or much less than the numbers of isolated incisors .
9 It has an overdraft of just over £1m , and its finance committee was told this week that , after hoarding trade-union and individual affiliations since 1987 , the party would have some £6m to spend in a May or June election — still much less than the Tories , but twice what it spent in the last election .
10 IN SPITE of their success with chilled lamb in some Scottish stores last year , New Zealand suppliers seem to have accepted this is little more than a coals to Newcastle exercise .
11 In one way , they represent little more than the attempts of established disciplines to retain market share in a situation of academic and economic scarcity .
12 For such a one to throw up his job , sell his house and come to Britain with little more than the proceeds of sale in his pocket , in order to start his own business from scratch in an unfamiliar environment , would seem , the height of folly .
13 Each child had one pair of all-purpose shoes but often there was little more than the uppers remaining .
14 Many of them are farming for little more than the subsidies .
15 In practice , the employment was seasonal and ill-paid , covering little more than the necessities of life .
16 The question " Were you speaking Patois or English just then ? " will not necessarily make a lot of sense to a member of the London Caribbean community , any more than the questions " Why did you say that in Patois ? " or " How would the effect of that be different if you said it in ordinary English ? " .
17 And for gentlemen , for men of property , the idea that the unpropertied working class should be represented in Parliament simply could not arise , any more than the reformers , with few exceptions , could enter into the minds of working people or sympathise with the political aspirations of their leaders .
18 They can not and will not in 1986 any more than the unions could or would in 1979 .
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