Example sentences of "have a much [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The teacher with a prepared lesson and a captive audience which may not interrupt has a much greater opportunity to actively edit the signing she is producing .
2 A kick is stronger than a punch and has a much greater reach .
3 That way the policy has a much greater chance of success .
4 A sound wave has a much greater chance of being scattered and absorbed by such dense vegetation .
5 In the model this arm contributes more than half of the dispersion measure whereas most of the line of sight has a much lower electron density , .
6 In this case , the O 2s AO has a much lower energy than either the O 2p z AO or the symmetric combination of H 1s AOs , and is more closely held to the oxygen core than the O 2p z AO .
7 Originally developed as a means to ensure compliance with regulations , environmental auditing now has a much wider remit for many companies .
8 A text frequently has a much wider variety of interpretations imposed upon it by analysts studying it at their leisure , than would ever have been possible for the participants in the communicative interaction which gives rise to the ‘ text ’ .
9 Their conclusion has a much wider use , though , than on the soccer field .
10 Maple has a much tighter grain than mahogany and breakages are consequently far less common , so whether a neck like this needs further strengthening is debatable .
11 Once looked upon as a valley of humility between two mountains of conceit — New York City and Philadelphia — the Garden State now has a much sharper image to present to the world .
12 The Vendor has a much better idea than the Purchaser of the Business .
13 Once the adult is much larger than a sperm cell , it pays some individuals to produce a small number of large gametes , rather than a large number of small ones , because a large gamete ( after fusing with a small one ) has a much better chance of surviving to become an adult .
14 The combination of Novell and Unix , the refrain goes , has a much better chance of countering this threat than USL by itself .
15 ‘ You know , she 's inventive , you see , and she has a much better brain than I have , ’ he said at last .
16 Everything he hits seems to be right out of the middle and he also has a much better routine with his putting now that caddy Fanny Sunesson has stopped her ‘ wicketkeeper ’ pose behind his stance .
17 The main school has a much better sports day though .
18 Altogether , tutorials take place over a period of about twenty-four weeks in the last year of a course , and usually by the last twelve tutorials a student has a much clearer idea of what he or she is about .
19 WordStar now has a much friendlier set of drop-down menus , which means you do n't have to remember those cryptic keyboard shortcuts .
20 The latest published figures on the origins of TB infection in confirmed herd breakdowns in Great Britain show that south-west England has a much higher incidence of breakdowns and badgers account for a high proportion of them .
21 First , the population of contract computer staff is much smaller than that of agency secretarial/office workers and , insofar as there are fewer people working on this basis for a very short term or occasional basis , has a much higher stability of membership .
22 The only significant difference that I have observed in the Best Bitter from Newcastle is that it has a much higher level of secondary fermentation in the cellar .
23 If the top solution has a much higher score than the next one down , the computer concludes that this is the correct diagnosis .
24 The approach applied here also has a much closer resemblance to that taken in Cukierman and Meltzer ( 1986 ) .
25 As well as an excellent display , the Lynx has a much louder speaker and — in the tradition of the Atari 8-bits and Commodore Amiga — a powerful set of chips to help it with the animation needed for superior three-dimensional games .
26 Clinton has a much keener interest than Bush in the problems of Northern Ireland .
27 But the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 , which outlaws direct or indirect discrimination and victimisation against men or women on the grounds of sex or marital status , has a much broader scope .
28 The state may thus mould the company 's constitution so as to protect the interests of parties directly involved , for instance the interests of shareholders against abuse of position by management , but it also has a much broader right of intervention , allowing it , if appropriate , to redefine corporate objectives to secure compliance with favoured social goals .
29 But this has a much different smell to the others .
30 The line joining OF has a much flatter slope than the line joining OD .
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