Example sentences of "more [conj] [det] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 If the ‘ closed ’ style of management described above is already a problem in many schools , then there are a great many more where such a style might permeate the existing decision-making process once delegated budgets are in place .
2 Hell' she cried , ’ 'I used to get more than that an hour for softening them' .
3 I love that land more than all the rest of the world .
4 He had scorned her honour , but she had more than all the rest , Isabel thought bitterly .
5 But in recompense I have received a gift worth more than all the rest put together .
6 Endill was sad at this because the Bookman was very clever and probably knew more than all the teachers put together .
7 I remember those more than all the dolls I had — especially a little box of blue beads . ’
8 We realize that the spiritual life matters infinitely more than all the material possessions or human status we once may have enjoyed .
9 John Frain made it two and it was going to take more than all the kings horses and men to put Town back together again …
10 These little glasses , which so closely resemble eyebaths , have become a fetish , and to suggest that a common cup might be shared ( after all it is communion ) is more than many a minister would dare .
11 The tunnels were gloomier , the only illumination coming from occasional bf tubes suspended awkwardly from holes hacked at random in the roof , no more than half a metre above their heads .
12 The environs of the waterfall are pleasant enough and there is no suspicion of the Peril 's dark secret unless a small opening under the overhang of the cliff alongside is noticed : this insignificant hole admits to the largest cave system in the valley , underground passages extending for more than half a mile below and far beyond the road in a succession of tight crawls and large caverns .
13 Mounds of dirt , rock and sand — little hills engulfed by dunes — blocked our view so that we could see no more than half a mile in any direction .
14 Tell her we all do the breast-stroke , refuse at water jumps , hit the bullseye once in a blue moon and get blisters when we run more than half a mile .
15 Even so , he could not see more than half a mile in the Roxburgh direction owing to a slight ridge of grass and whins .
16 The raiders fled empty-handed and Iris — who has n't competed in a race for 57 years — chased after them for more than half a mile .
17 The two narrows are narrow indeed — the first no more than half a mile wide and , before the opening of the Panama Canal in 1914 , crowded with a mass of shipping .
18 To us , the glacier now appeared to lie more than half a mile away from the river , but scrambling across the black gravel of the terminal moraine , we were surprised to find that this rubble concealed the true icy snout .
19 The incomparable asset of Pau is the Boulevard tea Pyrenees , which runs for more than half a mile along the southern edge of the main town , between the chateau at one end and the casino and the Parc Beaumont at the other .
20 A little more than half a mile away , on the other side of the Isle of Dogs , Ebenezer 's sister Ruth was also awake .
21 If you are male , of at least medium height , and more than half a stone overweight .
22 The result is that Jarvis has put on more than half a stone — he 's up to 11 and ahalf now — and feels all the better for it .
23 If you put more than half a stone on
24 The static torque/ rotor position characteristic repeats with a wavelength of one rotor tooth pitch , so the rotor only returns to the correct step position if it is not displaced by more than half a rotor tooth pitch .
25 The rotor oscillations increase in amplitude as successive steps are executed until the rotor lags or leads the demanded step position by more than half a rotor tooth pitch .
26 It is said to have been the biggest women 's gathering since suffrage days , a little more than half a century before …
27 It was a conquest which would be theirs for more than half a century .
28 The likely truth lies in those still-sealed files on chemical warfare experiments — but the riddle of Shingle Street refuses to be buried after more than half a century .
29 This was all part of a romanticising process that has afflicted Pygmalion for more than half a century .
30 It was in defence of the presumed ‘ sovereignty ’ of this peculiar nation — a product of the Quai d'Orsay rather than the creation of any Arab national aspiration — that countless thousands were to die more than half a century later .
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