Example sentences of "[adj] [noun] than have [adv] [be] " in BNC.

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1 If the hon. Lady knew what was available to those of her constituents who are unemployed , she would know that we offer a wider range of help to unemployed people than has ever been available in this country before .
2 ‘ Mass media ’ can then start to seem an even more incoherent term than has already been suggested .
3 The Developmental model of leadership advocated by Banner and Blasingame will require greater responsibility and the identification of leadership lower down the organisational structure than has traditionally been the case within either central or local government .
4 Recent research has shown that even in the thirteenth century the peasantry were participating much more actively in the monied economy than had previously been supposed .
5 These two pursued a much more interventionist policy than had previously been the case , using government-directed investment policy , as well as certain spending controls and tax increases , to tackle unemployment , reduce the budget deficit and restore economic growth .
6 Over the rest of the country , the large number of medieval chapels , most of which have not survived , may well be of pre-Conquest date , and they represent a fuller ecclesiastical landscape than has formerly been considered .
7 There seem to be several reasons for its emergence : a backlog of untrained practitioners ; a desire to certificate practice , for a variety of reasons , including status ; labour shortages which require quick solutions ; and a growth of theory or technology in the field itself , requiring more systematic training than has hitherto been necessary .
8 Thus ‘ etheric geography ’ opens up another possibility of interpreting the landscape in a more subtle and complete way than has usually been done .
9 The Earth can generate much more internal heat than has hitherto been suspected .
10 On Jan. 17 , 1991 , Heseltine announced the local government finance arrangements for 1991/92 , which provided for over £4,250 million more in extra support to local government than had already been granted in July 1990 for 1990-91 [ see p. 37623 ] In the budget , presented on March 19 by the Chancellor of the Exchequer Norman Lamont , a " substantial switch was proposed from local to central taxation , amounting to £4,250 million in 1991/92 , and the reducing net yield of local taxation to around £7,000 million [ see p. 38110 ] .
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