Example sentences of "[been] [det] more than a " in BNC.
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1 | But by then he had taken refuge in the church , and the service must have been little more than a conversation between him and old MacDiarmid , because not another soul had dared to run the gauntlet and go inside when the clock struck three . |
2 | Before the marriage Maggie had been little more than a drudge round the house . |
3 | Betrayers of the Truth might have been little more than a scientific rogues ' gallery and , as such , an entertaining if disillusioning read . |
4 | His stage presence lately has been little more than a presence ; he seems happy to stand in the shadows , occupying his usual spot on the drum riser while the spotlight dances on Bez and Bez dances with Rowetta and Rowetta plays with her whip , a caricature bad girl playing with the bad boys . |
5 | After all , he was a serving liaison officer between the CIA and the White House , even if he had been little more than a sleeper for several years . |
6 | She had been little more than a child when I first saw her , but no-one could forget her beautiful , lively eyes . |
7 | In this it may have been little more than a mouthpiece for a Russian directorate but in an article , which , says Sacks , amounted to a reading of the riot act to the ICP , one finds this clear and unmistakable instruction in the French journal Cahiers du Boishévisme : |
8 | He had been little more than a boy then . |
9 | However , resistance on the part of the Uruguayan government to Soviet overtures in 1959 for a larger share of the market indicated that the agreement had been little more than a contingency measure on the part of Montevideo . |
10 | Since her return to England , her existence had been little more than a living nightmare . |
11 | The whole performance had been little more than a formality , to give an appearance of government by consensus . |
12 | He tried hard not to wonder why the word had n't been much more than a growl . |
13 | All in all , a pitiful collection , but he was n't so self-deceiving as to believe their relationship had been much more than a sum of those parts . |
14 | ‘ It is declared that a good wife is a crown to her husband , but Mrs. Crawley had been much more than a crown to him … she had been crown , throne and sceptre all in one ’ . |
15 | The news about the lady 's quiverful of kiddies does not seem to have been any more than a very temporary dose of saltpetre , and it 's worn off . |