Example sentences of "much [prep] [pron] [verb] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 There is now quite an extensive sociological literature about old people , much of which draws attention to the various ways in which they are disadvantaged , even oppressed , through the creation of ‘ structured dependency ’ .
2 The virtual cessation of the local trip workings , coupled with the growth in company trains ( affecting the payloads of Speedlink services ) meant that the reduction of actual Speedlink services could not justify the retention of a separate yard at Tyne ( opened in 1961 ) — much of which handled Railfreight 's Metals sub-sector business .
3 The major changes in the social security regulations in April 1988 were one major example of an unrelenting stream of legislative change , much of which affects CAB clients detrimentally .
4 The Migration Period in Scandinavia witnessed the production of objects made from the great quantities of gold accumulated in the Roman world , much of which moved north when the Empire collapsed .
5 Interestingly , though , according to Lindsey much of what sounds acoustic on the record is n't actually acoustic ; it 's electric guitar recorded direct , and in mono .
6 None the less , large sums of public money are still being spent on drainage , much of it to improve farmland .
7 However , the literature so far described is concerned almost entirely with social work at the micro level : individuals , families and small groups , much of it using techniques that are of little relevance to community work , for example behaviour modification .
8 The report contains comments from policymakers in borrowing countries , much of it criticizing Bank officials for ignoring local input while implementing policies decided at Bank headquarters .
9 This growth has accelerated in recent years , much of it taking place in the 1970s and it has been concentrated more in the higher levels of the education system .
10 The diversity of material was due to the fact that much of it came courtesy of local mill-owners .
11 In 1898 the Great Western Railway conveyed 5,978 tons of broccoli from Cornwall , much of it going north via Didcot , Birmingham , and Crewe .
12 Bacon , as an advocate of really long-term investment , said the concentration on tobacco was ‘ to the untimely prejudice of the main business ’ , though it is not easy to see what he thought the main business of a plantation ought to be — his essay was full of sensible advice , much of it showing signs of the influence of the Virginia experience , but he never explained why people should want to support this sort of enterprise , unless it was to be part of a programme for sending people abroad to reduce overpopulation .
13 Sir Christopher said : ‘ The treaty is far from perfect and much of it concerns issues that should be debated more thoroughly .
14 The CAB has developed considerable skill in training , as this chapter has demonstrated , and much of it has relevance outside the CAB as well as inside .
15 A little too much of anything suffocates pop .
16 Edward III 's victories at Crécy and Poitiers did much in themselves to generate enthusiasm for the war , and the profits both from these victories and from the chevauchées in Aquitaine , Normandy and Brittany helped to ensure the support of the nobility for the war .
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