Example sentences of "[be] nothing more [conj] a [noun] " in BNC.

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1 In all probability it really had been nothing more than a prank .
2 All the tenderness he 'd shown her had been nothing more than a sham , just a front to convince the interested public that they were lovers .
3 The slenderest patients , those whose faces are nothing more than a triangle of bone around the eyes , they 're Musselmänner : not , as I first thought , as an ironical glance at musclemen .
4 " Your saints are nothing more than a lot of mischief-makers . "
5 This ‘ outsider ’ stance is , of course , nothing new , and if it bore the bulk of the band 's appeal , would be nothing more than a gimmick in itself .
6 It could be nothing more than a speculation , since at that point levels of attainment had no meaning other than their definition in the Report .
7 " Might it be nothing more than a girl ? "
8 It has proved , at the first time of asking in Test cricket , to be nothing more than a wrist-slapper .
9 The father 's solicitors appear to have thought perhaps otherwise and that the hearing on 27 January would be nothing more than a formality .
10 Reading is a process of identification with a work and a faithful reading will be nothing more than a word for word repetition of the text .
11 Determination , dedication and self-discipline may not fit the image but , without them , the boy from Black Rock , Victoria , would probably be nothing more than a beach bum right now .
12 If a lake is built behind the barrage , it will be nothing more than a sewage pit .
13 To her , language seemed to be nothing more than a means of discovering the price of butter or exchanging views about the weather .
14 Add in Edith Cresson 's political affiliation , plus her deserved reputation for dirigisme , and the freshly coined sobriquet ‘ Edithatcher ’ seems to be nothing more than a phrase-monger 's fancy .
15 A major reason for this unconcern is that various fraudsters who have operated in the field have given ESP a bad name : underfunded scientists have far better things to investigate than a phenomenon which seems , on the basis of the available evidence , to be nothing more than a farrago .
16 It turned out to be nothing more than a charter for busybodies , lacking muscle and new money .
17 Buddhists of the Northern school of China and Japan evolved their own theory of grace and came to believe in the Buddha as a Saviour , though in the earliest Scriptures he himself claimed to be nothing more than a teacher , a shower of the way .
18 Even if he 'd shown any signs at all of wanting to have her around — which he had n't — she 'd be nothing more than a burden .
19 Then , he had been quite amused and content to joke about being nothing more than a flower bearer , but he was not so happy when it became a regular occurrence .
20 Among some people who have been involved in negotiations at Geneva on laws-of-war matters there is a genuine concern that any neat set of rules limiting the use of nuclear weapons in one way or another might have the unfortunate effects either of weakening deterrence ; or else , contrariwise , of seeming to legitimise such uses of nuclear weapons as are not covered in any agreement ; or else of being nothing more than a paper accord , which would be of little real value in a conflict .
21 There were some complete manuscripts but there were nothing more than a collection of royal warrants written personally by King James and sealed under his signet ring , granting tasks or favours to his ‘ beloved physician , Andrew Selkirk ’ .
22 But the sailing date kept being put back : first for lack of volunteers , then because of uncertainty about the activities of ubiquitous Francis Drake — who disliked other privateers poaching prizes he regarded as his own — and finally for a wealth of reasons so small that Ann began to suspect that they were nothing more than a smoke screen , to hide her husband 's ever-increasing infatuation with Miss Jennifer Gristy .
23 ‘ She 's nothing more than a teenager ! ’
24 ‘ It 's nothing more than a crowd of women having a cup of tea .
25 But it 's nothing more than a double-cross , really .
26 Wood 's principles are those of Loudon more than three decades later : ‘ a palace is nothing more than a cottage IMPROVED ’ , he wrote .
27 ‘ This is very interesting , ’ she said , ‘ but I 'm afraid that it is nothing more than a performance .
28 ‘ The state is nothing more than a machine for the oppression of one class by another . ’
29 Thus , it is nothing more than a clearing house which does nothing in its own right .
30 If life is nothing more than a moving from one activity to the next it is not surprising if we become restless , cluttered and superficial .
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