Example sentences of "be more than [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Within his own country , he is not so much a Leviathan as a Gulliver figure hemmed in and tied down by a complex network of restraints that must be thrown off if he is to be more than a helpless giant in the White House .
2 But the declaration issued by the congress left no doubt that the decision was intended to be more than a mere facelift : ‘ The present concept of socialism , the Stalinist system , has exhausted all its social , economic , political and moral reserves , and has proved unsuitable for keeping pace with global developments .
3 Civilization had to be more than a mere confluence of economic interests : ‘ And until we set in order our own crazy economic and financial systems , to say nothing of our philosophy of life , can we be sure that our helping hands to the barbarian and the savage will be any more desirable than the embrace of the leper ? ’
4 To be worth two murders in eight days , Ascot had to be more than a mere gambling scam .
5 In aiming to be more than a mere common market , the Treaty emphasised the principle that the problems of one member state would be the problems of all .
6 In practice , it proved to be more than a mere truce after two decades of mutual and unbridled hostility .
7 The resemblance to Marryat in O'Brian 's novels is unarguable in general terms and may even be more than a broad likeness .
8 In the end the consequences of Chernobyl may be more than a horrifying collection of statistics about unleashed radiation , deformed lives , premature deaths .
9 Our data suggest that the biologically active amidated peptides that are potential mediators of these actions can not be more than a small proportion of the total progastrin produced .
10 She wished she had been born into a different age , an age when women had been allowed to be more than a decorative possession .
11 But to be more than a failed one-term president , he must be driven by these brickbats to decide what kind of president — indeed , what kind of man — he really wants to be .
12 Can it be that without the accompanying ‘ form ’ of the lessons of the past , of which memory is a vital part , ‘ freedom ’ can never be more than a fragile short-lived luxury ?
13 Napoleon III had no intention of allowing this to happen and so he determined that the Court should never be more than a set-piece , a backdrop in front of which the principal figures of the regime could be seen to advantage .
14 During the menopause a drop in hormone levels may account for a temporary loss of sexual desire in women , but this need not be more than a passing loss .
15 Some cardiologists complained that the heart could never be more than a temporary remedy and that the money spent on the research could be better used for drug therapies and other techniques .
16 However , for most airports with overall impact of the Tunnel is unlikely to be more than a temporary hiccup in the strong growth of traffic .
17 If it is to be more than a symbolic marker of the moment when North and South decided in principle to work together for mutual survival , a number of decisions on how to administer it will have to be made .
18 You may have known someone else for twenty years and yet he will never be more than a casual acquaintance .
19 There will never be more than a stray shower ; the waves will never be more than three feet high , with a scattering of white horses when the breeze runs into double figures .
20 An accurate and meaningful account of a human society should be more than a generalised narrative of the changes in composition of the archaeological record through time .
21 There was never even a possibility that Barney Clark would ever be more than a wretched cripple .
22 And I figured that it would be more than a racing cert that it was situated in another alleyway .
23 But it will have to be more than the mysterious death used in the old , simple detective story .
24 WHILST the accounts from last year 's World Cup are still not available , I.B. Secretary Keith Rowlands asserted in Catania recently that RWC profits would be more than the paltry £3 million mooted earlier this year by fellow director Marcel Martin .
25 . The damage done to industry by any of these three methods would probably be more than the good done to it by the direct help and , anyway I am not clear on the sort of direct help that might be intended . ’
26 Referring principally to those techniques of soil conservation developed by research stations and government institutions , many studies of the economics of soil conservation which focus on the private economic incentives for soil conservation , show that , although total benefits from a soil conservation scheme such as terracing may be more than the total cost , individual farmers usually lose income from these practices ( Harshbarger & Swanson 1964 , Holtman & Connor 1974 ) .
27 The alternative , it should be stressed , must be more than an alternative governing group .
28 Other resistances or blocks to communication can be more than an initial reluctance to talk about the main issues .
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