Example sentences of "more [adj] [conj] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 What more obvious than for the allies to outflank the French right to cut their lines of communication with Vienna ?
2 If the pond-building books fail to acknowledge Murphy 's Law , it is nowhere more evident than at the point where neat diagrams demonstrate the laying of slabs over flap of liner .
3 Curiously enough the use of phosphatic material to build hard parts is generally primitive — calcium phosphate shells are nowhere more numerous than in the earliest Cambrian .
4 If there is a twist to the plot , then it is nowhere more apparent than at the window management level where , it seems , Hewlett-Packard Co is determined to make its Visual User Environment stick .
5 If there is a twist to the plot , then it is nowhere more apparent than at the window management level where , it seems , Hewlett-Packard is determined to make its Visual User Environment stick .
6 This is nowhere more apparent than in the leafy avenues of middle-class suburbia , among the 2CV owners and Guardian readers , the teachers and social workers , where family life is pictured tumbling happily among Early Learning Centre climbing frames , glowing cosily out from safely bohemian pine-scrubbed kitchens .
7 The division between two schools of thought is nowhere more apparent than in the field of Zambian foreign policy .
8 The changing nature of ‘ town and country planning ’ is nowhere more apparent than in the area of what Circular 22/80 calls Planning and Business Activity .
9 This is nowhere more apparent than in the sixth quatrain : " Golden tongue " decently translates , but is purchased with a lame rhyme in " the shades among " .
10 They continued to evolve with undiminished vigour through the Tertiary , and their fossil remains are nowhere more abundant than in the ‘ crags ’ of later Tertiary age .
11 The concept , however , is nowhere more relevant than for the London area itself , which has recently been reaffirmed as a home of the rapidly expanding international office sector .
12 This is nowhere more necessary than in the analysis of homophobia .
13 This was nowhere more true than on the northern border , where the nobles who held office as Wardens of the Marches , a system that had reached full development by the end of Edward III 's reign , were in effect allowed to maintain permanent standing armies at the Exchequer 's expense .
14 The statement that ‘ the parties that contended in turn for domination regarded the possession of this huge state edifice as the principal spoils of the victor ’ is nowhere more true than in the immediate pre- and post-colonial competition among indigenous interests for the administrative positions hitherto reserved for the imperialists .
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