Example sentences of "for more [conj] [adv] [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 So two satisfied customers then … vegetarianism at this school looks set to be the dish of the day for more than just National Vegetarian Week .
2 And house burglaries and car thefts account for more than half all crimes reported .
3 Education accounts for more than half most county 's budgets .
4 This analysis suggests that the identification and diagnosis of language disorder is unlikely to provide the basis for more than relatively crude speculations regarding the child 's prognosis .
5 If left for more than about 20 minutes after a run , it takes several turns of the starter before it fires .
6 If the incipient spin has progressed for more than about half a turn because the pilot has kept the stick back , applying the full opposite rudder must be a good thing because it helps to stop the rotation and to even up the stalling of the wings .
7 Moreover , experience shows that imprisonment for more than about ten years is liable to have so deleterious an effect on the prisoner that longer detention should be avoided whenever possible .
8 ‘ He 's brilliant , he 's happy , he wakes up every day joyous and he never holds a grudge for more than about three minutes .
9 Eventually it receded leaving the fertile marshlands stretching for more or less ten miles to the wolds , whose now gentle eastern slopes were once the exposed chalk cliffs .
10 Today in order to meet the burgeoning demand for more and more creamy pints of Guinness , St. James 's Gate , through the recent investment of IR£200 million , has become one of the world 's most technologically advanced breweries , having the flexibility to brew virtually anything to the highest international standards .
11 The growing trend now is for more and more European golfers , and especially the heavyweights , to concentrate on playing the US circuit .
12 With that German failure the Allied crisis at Ypres ended , for more and more French troops had been brought up to sustain the salient 's southern flank .
13 Mastery of that code by distant descendants could therefore become more ‘ mindless ’ in the early stages ( even those involving significant structure ) as brains were shaped by natural selection for more and more rapid language acquisition .
  Next page