Example sentences of "[noun] much [adv] [adv] [conj] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 In contrast , local newspapers tend to take cases much less selectively and on occasions will continue to maintain interest in a case which seems unconnected with any other .
2 The pattern recognition should also be able to identify the beginnings of words much more accurately than at present , and more investigation of the efficacy of some measure of word length would be useful .
3 We are funding prison security much more excessively than in the past .
4 As the authors state , such letters are also of benefit to hospital clinicians , who can focus on the problems much more quickly than by scanning notes ( often untidy or illegible ) plus related correspondence and results .
5 Courts would be involved in pre-trial procedure much more actively than at present in attempting to keep the parties to proposed new timetables , whilst allowing for a realistic degree of relaxation by the court , and permitting the parties to vary particular time limits by agreement , subject always to the obligation to have the case ready for trial and set down within the overall timetable .
6 This has given time for the ‘ marked ’ isotope to work its way through the environment much more thoroughly than in Turin .
7 In the non-competition condition P.P. made fixation shifts to the target in his left half-field , but competition reduced this performance much more severely than in the right half-field ( Fig. 2 ) .
8 Bigger animals , such as humans , horses , and cows , have relatively more dark meat , made of many slow muscle fibres that can sustain activity much more cheaply and for longer periods than fast fibres .
9 But generally , the deadline achieved its purpose and we were able to despatch certificates to students much more quickly than in the past . ’
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