Example sentences of "more [adv] [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Power stations can be made cleaner and more efficient , so that they use less fossil fuel , particularly high carbon coal ; energy can be used more economically by the consumer ; and there is nuclear energy ( the subject of the following chapter ) , which whatever else it is capable of doing , does not produce carbon dioxide .
2 You would reach your market more economically in a women 's magazine where the percentage of readers who knit is known to be high .
3 The term ivory has also been applied more loosely to a number of other substances .
4 To understand the reasons behind that agreement we must look more loosely at the context in which it was made .
5 The Navigator shuddered and focused himself more acutely on the immaterium without , alert for maelstroms .
6 Fertility increases in Britain occurred in a modest way in the later 1930s and much more strikingly between the mid-1950s and 1960s .
7 When working wet-in-wet I found the rounds especially useful for adding in detailed lines by carefully dragging the brush quickly across the painting , and for fusing lines by dragging the wet colour more slowly through the painting surface .
8 Is he walking even more slowly up the hill from the station this evening , even more wearily along the lane ?
9 Only his finger moved a little more slowly along the line .
10 Then we walked more slowly into the church .
11 BUOYED by Denmark 's decisive Yes to Maastricht , three other Nordic governments are knocking all the more vigorously on the door of the European Community .
12 Had the Plowden Report received more support from politicians , academics and educationalists and had its recommendations been applied rather more vigorously across the country , I think our primary schools would today be much less open to criticism .
13 The reason such analysis has not proceeded more vigorously in the past is that evolutionary biologists have virtually ignored developmental psychology , now a vast field in its own right , while psychologists for their part have not appreciated the great potential of evolutionary theory for their own studies .
14 For them , negotiation , in the form of bargaining , can proceed more effectively through a process of bluff and ambush , which is inimical to the demands of justice .
15 R&D consortia which include films that produce different products using the same basic technological knowledge may also be able to segment user markets , price discriminating more effectively as a group than they are able to do when they act independently and earning a higher return on their R&D activities .
16 By engaging in some instances in dialogue directly with local and regional authorities and by-passing national governments , the Commission hoped to be able to co-ordinate the allocation of the Structural Funds and direct aid more effectively to the problem areas , thereby also implicitly weakening the influence of national government upon the use of EC funding .
17 initiate dialogue between church communicators and the denominational social justice issues committees , to help them communicate their activities more effectively to the churches and to the general public ;
18 Standards will represent a new way of describing performance at work and will enable organisations to identify and match peoples ' needs more effectively to the requirements of industry in a constantly changing world .
19 Since higher education is currently exam oriented and likely to remain so even under SCOTCATS it is recommended that SCOTVEC and institutions of higher education jointly undertake an urgent review of modular certificates in order to discover ways in which these could be made to relate more effectively to the demands of full time higher education .
20 The briefing pack accompanying Working for patients ( DoH , 1989h ) claims that at ‘ Regional and district level planning will be able to respond more effectively to the health needs of the population rather than being tied to details of the operational delivery of services ’ .
21 The Report of HM Inspectorate concludes that the need is now paramount for careful planning to match the provision of courses more effectively to the needs of students and employers .
22 The research aims to develop techniques of obtaining information about the landscape using remote sensing systems and to present and display these data so that they may be used more effectively for the management of landscape resources .
23 This time the party campaigned more effectively for the treaty and 60% of its supporters voted Yes .
24 However , due to the limited capacities of the Committee it was recommended that the group should concentrate on running the centre more effectively for the time being and to engage management consultants to help it develop the capacity to run more complicated projects .
25 It is usually more difficult to deal more effectively with a complaint if it is reported at a later date .
26 BA argued that it needed to acquire its smaller rival in order to be able to compete more effectively with the mega-airlines that had emerged , particularly in the US , during the previous two years .
27 Empowerment , which has its roots in the US , has taken on new significance recently as American corporations try to find a way to compete more effectively with the Japanese .
28 In practice , by 1975 , the resistance to this approach proved so great that settlement was the real objective , with the justification that farming families could be supported in every way — agriculturally , medically and educationally — much more effectively on a group basis .
29 It allowed coal and steel production on the Continent to be managed more effectively without the need for a restrictive ‘ cartel ’ of businessmen , such as had been formed by steel producers in the inter-war years .
30 Both of these goals can be achieved more effectively without an evaluation charade .
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