Example sentences of "more closely [conj] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 The agreement will also result in employers working more closely than before with students and teachers in schools and colleges , to broaden their understanding of the world of work .
2 The agreement will also result in employers working more closely than before with students and teachers in schools and colleges , to broaden their understanding of the world of work .
3 The agreement will also result in employers working more closely than before with students and teachers in schools and colleges , to broaden their understanding of the world of work .
4 The agreement will also result in employers working more closely than before with students and teachers in schools and colleges , to broaden their understanding of the world of work .
5 The agreement will also result in employers working more closely than before with students and teachers in schools and colleges , to broaden their understanding of the world of work .
6 The agreement will also result in employers working more closely than before with students and teachers in schools and colleges , to broaden their understanding of the world of work .
7 The agreement will also result in employers working more closely than before with students and teachers in schools and colleges , to broaden their understanding of the world of work .
8 The agreement will also result in employers working more closely than before with students and teachers in schools and colleges , to broaden their understanding of the world of work .
9 The agreement will also result in employers working more closely than before with students and teachers in schools and colleges , to broaden their understanding of the world of work .
10 Suffice as it 's to say that the negotiations did provide for extra seats for Germany in account of the additional population that accrued to Germany from the reunification of East and West Germany and er er at the same time the opportunity was taken to allot some extra seats to some other countries er which erm bore in mind er more closely than before , the respective differences in population sizes of the various countries that make up the community , er the two special committees that I referred to Mr Deputy Speaker , were set up in July nineteen ninety three .
11 More closely than ever in these parts .
12 As a result , by the end of the seventeenth century popular Anglicanism was enmeshed more closely than ever within the social fabric of the English countryside .
13 So impassive and peculiar had the Collector become , so obviously on the verge , everyone thought so ( you would have thought so yourself if you had seen him at this time ) , of giving up the ghost , that his face was scrutinized more closely than ever for any trace of remorse as the gorse bruiser was carried out .
14 But some of the mystique surrounding the presidency had gone for ever , and future holders of the office were bound to be scrutinized more closely than ever before .
15 The Sumatran tiger is more closely and deceptively striped than his larger Indian cousin , and quite a bit more intelligent .
16 Element analysis and CL can thus be more closely and conveniently linked .
17 We need now to look more closely and more precisely at the role of knowledge , and how it interacts with language to create discourse .
18 Ellen and Neal Wood , in Class , Ideology and Ancient Political Theory maintain that the ‘ classics of political theory are fundamentally ideological ’ ( 1978 , p. ix ) and they set out to relate them ‘ more closely and systematically ’ to their social contexts .
19 When he insisted that they were pounds , she looked more closely and then exclaimed : ‘ Of course they 're British — they 've got a picture of Mrs Thatcher on them ! ’
20 Such thoughts are usually considered to be unnecessarily morbid , although the subject is probably more painful for younger people than those who more closely and personally face their own decline and death .
21 Assessors can use an accompanying checklist to make a more detailed assessment of certain factors , allowing the resulting completed form to reflect more closely and personally the assessed person 's needs .
22 Perhaps one of the greatest advantages of a systems viewpoint has been to cement the branches of physical geography more closely and therefore to make what Walton ( 1968 ) characterized as the unity of the physical environment a more realistic prospect .
23 This would also have reproduced John 's set-up more closely as well , since he had a large group of about 20 adults .
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