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

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1 Some thoughtful Germans , such as Volker Rühe , general secretary of the ruling Christian Democrats , argue that now more than ever the Europeans should speed moves to form a multinational force that includes German soldiers .
2 And so more than ever the ‘ voluntary ’ CAB finds itself carrying out what should be in effect a statutory task .
3 When Sally got off the bus he was waiting for her , leaning against the bonnet , smoking a cigarette and looking more than ever the dashing young man-about-town .
4 In Drenthe , feeling more than ever the despised outcast , he found consolation in a human resting place .
5 WE CONTINUE TO OFFER A CHOICE OF EQUIPMENT , INTERIOR STYLING AND LAYOUT SO THAT MORE THAN EVER THE OYSTER 68 OFFERS MANY OF THE BENEFITS OF A COMMISSIONED ‘ ONE OFF ’ , BUT WITH LESS RISK , EXPENSE AND WITH PREDICTABLE STANDARDS OF PERFORMANCE QUALITY .
6 The ie became more than ever the pre-eminent entity in society .
7 Today more than ever the phrase " as old as one feels " is no mere consolatory cliche . )
8 But the silence deepened , and she felt more than ever the changes in her .
9 Up to the autumn of 1960 the underlying divergences between himself and Debré had not prevented the two of them from working together closely ; after de Gaulle 's speech in November 1960 , the policy became less collaborative and more than ever the exclusive domain of the presidency .
10 Clearly more people liked more than ever the fare and welcoming fellowship of the Undercroft .
11 In ( quite accurately ) evoking the hoary old spirit of punk , it helps that The White Horse is smaller and more cramped than ever the original Marquee was ; that the stage is only centimetres off the floor and resembles a cloakroom , as bags and coats are dumped onstage ; that there are mates and friends standing virtually onstage and the whole place is a hot , airless , shambolic morass of so-called Huggy nationalists .
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