Example sentences of "[vb -s] a much wide [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | But a decade later , French observers continued to lament the absence in most of the 12 other member-states of ESA of strong centralized and specialized space policy-making bodies such as the CNES : ‘ In Germany , the DFVLR covers a much wider sector than that of the CNES but does not exercise political responsibility ; in Britain , responsibility is dispersed among the end-users such as British Telecom . ’ |
2 | For example , the width of the five grades is not consistent , and grade 3 not only accounts for about half the land , but also covers a much wider range of possibilities than , say , grade 1 ( Gilg , 1975a ) , and even the subsequent sub-division of grade 3 in the 1970s can not be applied objectively ( Worthington , 1982 ) . |
3 | This is a very personal book which covers a much wider field than the title suggests . |
4 | The Council of Europe covers a much wider area with a much greater population than that covered by the European Economic Community . |
5 | Originally developed as a means to ensure compliance with regulations , environmental auditing now has a much wider remit for many companies . |
6 | A text frequently has a much wider variety of interpretations imposed upon it by analysts studying it at their leisure , than would ever have been possible for the participants in the communicative interaction which gives rise to the ‘ text ’ . |
7 | Their conclusion has a much wider use , though , than on the soccer field . |
8 | Karajan 's 1975 recording on DG is majestic , but it does n't excite me as it should , and I have to say that there are two performances I consistently turn to much more often : first , a Supraphon disc with the Czech Philharmonic conducted by Lovro von Matàcic , a rugged and unjustly neglected account which deserves a much wider circulation ( . |
9 | Stoker ( 1988 , Chapter 3 ) identifies a much wider trend in this direction . |
10 | Real hypochondria encompasses a much wider range of symptomatology , is far more persistent , and is certainly not an occupational disease limited to would-be quacks . |