Example sentences of "more [adv] [verb] with [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The west façade is more richly decorated with sculpture than is usual in England ( 448 ) .
2 In Britain , for the Irish entering in search of a new life , Liverpool and London stations were their gateways to the streets more often paved with misery than with gold .
3 With the development of Imperial architecture and the need for large public gatherings in baths and basilicas the space was more often vaulted with brick and concrete .
4 Consistent with this , birth weight is more strongly associated with death before 65 years than with death at all ages .
5 For Jews , there is no subject more profoundly freighted with fear and with hope than Israel .
6 At present , however , it is worth observing that the degree of foregrounding in this passage , and the interpretative process it elicits are of a kind more readily associated with poetry than with prose .
7 Returning to our work Sid and I became more and more closely connected with Radio Station 1OAB and during the Annual General Meeting of the association that year I was appointed Programme Director .
8 There can be little doubt that attractiveness in women is more closely associated with sexuality and sexuality with youth , than is the case for men .
9 Tarnow-Mordi et al found the mean arterial-alveolar oxygen tension ratio more closely associated with death than the worst arterial-alveolar oxygen tension ratio .
10 We do n't want anything more ter do with yow , ’ I told her .
11 It is important to distinguish work of this kind , and to emphasize its possible value , by comparison with that narrowest version of the social conditions of art ( often called ‘ sociologism ’ or ‘ sociological relativism ’ ) , which is more commonly associated with Marxism .
12 For example , each model sees the amount of legitimacy conferred upon a dispute as influencing the way it is handled by the police ; and there is similar agreement that deep-seated ‘ ideological issues ’ are more commonly associated with disorder than more mundane ‘ material issues ’ .
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