Example sentences of "much [det] than [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Where it 's two males , male applicant and a male interviewer , and the prospective employee has a less prestigious accent than the interviewer , so it 's quite likely that the prospective employee would shift his accent towards a more that of the employer , due to his relative need of approval so much more than vice versa .
2 At the classroom level , the teaching and learning methods have to be organised to allow for much more than simple coverage of the topic .
3 Despite evidence that reading encompasses much more than simple character recognition little of this language information has been exploited in text recognition systems .
4 The dedication to their appearance of stars such as the luminous , fiftyish , Catherine Deneuve , sixtyish socialites such as Marie Helene de Rothschild or Helene de Mortemart and political wives such as Bernadette Chirac and Claude Pompidou , may be much more than simple vanity and may involve no self-admiration at all .
5 Making allowances for variations in people 's familiarity with each type of credit ( judged by how often they applied any labels to each type ) , some types of credit were labelled as expensive much more than other types .
6 Best of all , the safety mattress does not cost much more than standard foam .
7 It should be noted , however , that heads were on the whole reluctant to ascribe much more than moderate success to their coordinators in respect of any of these aims .
8 I do n't quite know why , but he gave me the impression , without uttering more than a few words , that he had much more than superficial knowledge , and an amusing touch of the sardonic as well .
9 Toughened glass costs much more than normal float glass and it must be ordered cut to size .
10 But his policy as a whole was much more than mere posturing .
11 In essence , the complication is that retailers provide ‘ much more than mere warehousing ’ ( Marvel and McCafferty , 1984 , p. 348 ) .
12 Even if the student attempts to revise , he/she will tend no to do much more than mere repetition .
13 Soil husbandry involves much more than mere ploughing and cultivation , although these are hard-won skills in themselves .
14 This parliamentary etiquette was much more than mere expression of ‘ Victorian prurience ’ .
15 Many of these features are unique to these mountains , and make them of much more than mere climbing interest .
16 Yet body language often tells us so much more than mere words .
17 Yet modern Japan is also the product of much more than recent upheavals .
18 While the early Waltz-Caprices , composed when Reger was only 19 years of age and a student at the Wiesbaden Conservatory , are evidently modelled on the numerous dance sets by Brahms ( yet another of the composer 's musical heroes ) , they amount to much more than blatant pastiche .
19 ‘ I 'm afraid my cooking does n't extend to much more than scrambled eggs or sardines on toast , ’ said Julia , feeling thoroughly useless .
20 But the most important point is that very often auditors are required to do much more than express opinions on financial statements , in the public sector in general and in government particularly .
21 Fat women risk so much more than thin women when starting a sexual relationship , because we are taught that we are not capable of inspiring love or lust : we have forfeited the right to be sexual because our bodies are incompatible with desire .
22 In 1937 Sino-Japanese friction erupted into full-scale war , but even this failed to rally much more than token support for China in the West .
23 Sexuality involves much more than sexual intercourse .
24 But do n't expect much more than pompous doggerel in the words .
25 Some Whigs were implicated in Jacobite activities , amongst them John Wildman , Charles Mordaunt ( third Earl of Monmouth ) , the Earls of Dorset and Shrewsbury , and the Duke of Bolton , although whether we should see their alleged intrigues as much more than fire-insurance Jacobitism is unclear .
26 Planned pregnancies have declined much less than unplanned ones , especially in higher order births in Britain and in the USA ( Westoff and Ryder 1977 ) .
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