Example sentences of "more [adv] [subord] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | Suffice it to say that a Labour bureaucracy developed that accepted some basic tenets of bourgeois ideology more wholly than the bourgeoisie itself . |
2 | The plaintiff as an individual will feel the pressures much more keenly than the defendant , backed by the insurance company . |
3 | A semi-double bloom , of which there are a great many , is somewhere between , but tending more towards ‘ single ’ than ‘ double ’ so that , although there may be as many as 15 petals , the flower opens more loosely than a double and reveals the anthers more readily . |
4 | A fair bit of pressure is needed to get the chips securely seated and a broken motherboard tends to perform rather more slowly than a complete one ! |
5 | It causes a clock on the ground to run more slowly than an identical one placed at high altitude . |
6 | The beef is tender and full of flavour and , although the breed grows more slowly than the big continental animals , the deficit is adequately compensated for by much cheaper production costs in terms of food and housing ( it stays out all year round ) . |
7 | or they may grow more slowly than the rest of the body , and so decrease in relative size , which is negative allometry . |
8 | Thus the double layer moves more slowly than the average and so yet more growth layers pile up behind it and can not pass . |
9 | And if you are still not convinced , then Parker says that customer demand for mainframe capacity continues to grow healthily , even if more slowly than the good old days . |
10 | They appear to show that , at least in the richest countries with the toughest environmental standards , municipal waste is growing more slowly than the economy as a whole . |
11 | Indeed , they boasted proudly that retail electricity prices had risen more slowly than the retail price index in general : although their own tariffs had risen faster , average consumption had gone up and the extra kWh had been sold at the lower incremental charges of two-part or block tariffs , thus bringing the average domestic price in their first ten years down by a fifth in real terms . |
12 | On orbits of the outermost family , stars circulate more slowly than the potential , and conversely for the inner two families . |
13 | The skilled sportsman seems to have more time and to do things more slowly than the less skilled one . |
14 | In all subjects , the digestible phase ( omelette ) of the test meal emptied more slowly than the liquid phase and the mean T50 was 2.4 ( 0.38 ) h . |
15 | Foreign ministers and foreign offices , an administrative apparatus exclusively or at least mainly concerned with the formulation and carrying-out of foreign policy , developed much more slowly than the diplomats whom they were to control . |
16 | In addition these dissociation profiles appear to demonstrate that the enhanced DNase I cleavage disappears more slowly than the actual footprint . |
17 | This suggests that the DNA structure relaxes back to its native form more slowly than the dissociation of the drug . |
18 | She blinked twice , rapidly , then a third time more slowly as the significance of his question sank in . |
19 | Also , since to a large extent the promise of Nazi solutions was false and depended upon the Nazi ability to create the problems it intended to resolve by force , matters in Danzig had to move much more slowly because the city was subject to massive foreign observation through the League of Nations . |
20 | Unlike a machine that breaks down with use , we become stronger , more flexible and age more slowly if every muscle and joint is used frequently . |
21 | Go much more slowly if the road is wet or icy or first drive more slowly at night , remember it can be especially difficult to see pedestrians or cyclists at night and in poor daylight conditions , do not break , sharply , except in an emergency . |
22 | These trees , in full sunlight , were growing more vigorously than the forest trees and produced enough pods to make our life easier . |
23 | The occasional or once-in-a-while reward ( intermittent reinforcement ) will consolidate an established bad habit more effectively than a reward given every time . |
24 | He was first drawn to the whole theme of cycles of disadvantage , he says , by some research which suggested that the mature and the middle classes use birth control more effectively than the young and the disadvantaged . |
25 | It is clear both from Scripture and in the long experience of the Church , that some Christians can do this much more effectively than the majority . |
26 | Hobson Brown , in Russell Reynolds ' New York office , maintains that his firm , more effectively than the other headhunters , has attracted the first real career-search consultants , graduates from business schools who have deliberately chosen to make a career in executive search ; it was always the goal of Reynolds himself to build up a business as prestigious and high-powered as Morgan Guaranty , in which an ambitious graduate would seek to work right through to retirement . |
27 | Colin Hughes and Patrick Wintour , who wrote Labour Rebuilt , describe his communications strategy in terms of the Labour Party : ‘ Mandelson and Gould succeeded , not because they exploited slick advertising and media management more effectively than the Conservatives , but because they forged themselves an approach to political strategy which has never before been seen — certainly in the Labour Party , and arguably , ever in British politics . |
28 | As yet , however , there is little evidence that cytokine secreting tumour infiltrating lymphocytes perform any more effectively than the parent cells . |
29 | Experiments with linearized pBR322 fragments indicate that the complexes form DNA interstrand crosslinks although no more effectively than the monomers PtenCl 2 , 1 , or PtpropCl 2 , 4 , ( 4 ) . |
30 | They can provide certain types of services more effectively than the statutory sector . |