Example sentences of "it [adv] [verb] more [noun] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Maybe in the short term it is an advantage to a few people working in the car industry but it only encourages more people to generate more pollution . ’
2 Violence of any sort solves nothing — it only breeds more violence .
3 It only brings more destruction .
4 It just makes more sense .
5 Well , it still does n't give me any money , but it just stops more money going out of my account .
6 Given the success in getting the Israelis and Palestinians round the table , would it not make more sense for the Government to right that wrong and ensure that , during our presidency from July onwards , we talk directly to the PLO ?
7 Would it not make more sense to have a moratorium on pit closures in the interests of jobs , the balance of payments and European energy conservation ?
8 The significant change I think is in the balance of debt between fixed and variable rate , where we took a conscious decision and been working it through to take more advantage of the prospective and er decline , it was prospective earlier in the year er in selling interest rates and the continued low er short-term rates in the United States .
9 It generally has more impact on debtors and moves along faster than the County Court .
10 It usually has more nails on its feet than the African species .
11 Hamleys , the country 's largest toy shop , claims it still sells more Concordes than Tornados .
12 It also made more money , because every playgoer had a seat and paid a shilling for it .
13 When he commanded 4th Field Regiment in Northern Ireland in 1974 the regiment was awarded four Queen 's Gallantry Medals and four Commander-in-Chief 's commendations ; it also recovered more weapons than any other unit serving in Belfast up to that time .
14 It also proposes more exploitation of the wood for educational purposes .
15 It also released more soldiers who were free to seek a living by fighting elsewhere .
16 It also has more potential and requires more involvement on our part . ’
17 It is possible that this is a result of the different judgment tasks that were used , certainly subjects reported finding the normality judgment a more difficult task to understand than either of the tasks from Study 2 , it is possible that it also required more attention to the films generally .
18 It also suggested more finance be made available for oil and gas exploration in non-oil LDCs .
19 It also makes more sense when it comes to keeping to your target weight once you have reached it .
20 If anything , like the Patent Office , it probably needs more staff to deal properly with new ideas and to advise inventors .
21 Like its predecessors , it attracted attention from many sources , and in the liberal or liberated social climate of the post-war years it probably created more problems than it solved .
22 Do pay extra for daytime babysitting ; it inevitably involves more work .
23 And when it comes to lipsticks , it now offers more shades than any other company in the world .
24 Perhaps we believe that others perceive us as weak and ineffectual when in reality we choose to make a stand only about those things which really matter , knowing that it often takes more strength to remain calm and in control than to meet aggression with more aggression .
25 When A&R men talk of , ‘ compromising in little bits ’ taken to its extreme , it often means more choruses , fewer verses and the vocals and drums well up in the mix .
26 Some people have notions of using the technology as an ambitious static analysis machine but in most cases it simply presents more data than anybody needs and will have to be restrained .
27 It sometimes takes more courage to say no , I do n't want to you than to get into the fight yeah .
28 It definitely had more charisma to it than the Civil Service or teaching .
29 There 's always a danger that you 've , you 've , it 's a fine balance between it creating more work , so it actually causes more problems .
30 Whether or not one agrees with Oakeshott 's position , it represents a sophisticated defence of the imperfectionist argument for a ‘ limited politics ’ , and it certainly warrants more consideration than Honderich provides .
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