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

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1 The findings of the male researchers , she claims , are dogged by what she calls the problem of women ‘ whose sexuality remains more diffuse , whose perception of self is so much more tenaciously embedded in relationships with others and whose moral dilemmas hold them in a mode of judgment that is insistently contextual ’ .
2 They are perhaps also more darkly moved by some threat in the law of flesh and blood itself .
3 REM sleep is thus even more clearly associated with dreaming in so-called " non-dreamers " than regular dreamers , who tend to report dreaming whenever they 're woken up !
4 On the other hand there was the demand , often locally generated , usually far more enthusiastically supported by parents and teachers , for an education which would produce a competent and reasonably docile junior civil servant , a clerk , storekeeper , interpreter or later an assistant this or junior that to work under a white colonial officer .
5 Terror , counter-terror , torture , and the absolute necessity of violence ( later much more clumsily explored by Leone in A Fistful Of Dynamite ) are relentlessly portrayed , all to Ennio Morricone 's least flowery score ever .
6 Access to information was otherwise protected by the Official Secrets Act 1911 , section 2 , and is perhaps now even more tightly controlled by the Official Secrets Act 1989 .
7 Taking a steady look at it , thought Nelly to herself , easing off her shoes for greater comfort , it was n't such a bad little house , and certainly very much more conveniently placed for shopping than her own cottage at Lulling Woods .
8 But they were very much more strongly opposed to him than were many orthodox Christians .
9 The wealthy nations are going to be better able to use and organise information , whose value will be very much more closely linked to the value of goods .
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