Example sentences of "a wider [noun] of " in BNC.

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1 All new patterns , but with a wider selection of weights of yarn for all seasons suitability and with styles from the simplest and most stylish to high-drama pieces for electronics .
2 The new range will include a wider selection of hand knitting yarns in Mohair blends , British Wool and synthetic fibres , shirts , socks and suiting lengths plus a collection of knitted garments for all the family .
3 lonnbergii , dominican gulls Larus dominicanus , blue-eyed cormorants Phalacrocorax atriceps , and a wider selection of petrels that breed both at the surface and in cavities among scree .
4 They 're especially keen for young men and people from ethnic groups to come forward to add a wider selection of tissue types to the register .
5 The Napoleonic model in France , even though it survived virtually unaltered for over a century and a half , eventually had to yield to demands for a wider measure of regional self-government , and over the past years schemes of regional devolution have been instituted .
6 The ‘ racialization , of British politics throughout the last 20 years has ensured that most areas of public debate — law and order , the welfare state , unemployment , youth , education , the inner cities , the family — now have a racial dimension and often one in which black communities , but especially black youth , appear as threats in a wider demonology of scroungers , shirkers , muggers , drug pushers , school failures and inadequate parents ( Hall et al . ,
7 I hope that this suggestion may stimulate a wider vision of future purchasing arrangements for commissioning services .
8 This broad view offers a wider concept of ‘ integration ’ than the narrow educational framework which predominantly confines debate in this area .
9 The first of these was to look at the school with a wider concept of resources than that with which the library project was concerned , and the second was to feed into the library committee a relatively independent group 's view of appropriate resource proposals .
10 We have a different role , but nevertheless and even , an important one is perhaps in even looking further ahead than the Emergency Planning and therefore I would support er in being brief I would support very much erm Mr 's er motion if you can call it a motion which has been seconded and I hope that other members will will agree that erm we can pass this on to the Chief Executive who obviously will be doing this in any case , but it would give er a a an added er measure if you like er I 'm talking in terms of member involvement in pressing for er a wider look of what has happened after this sad flood has been dealt with .
11 Such knowledge could , however , continue to be useful when used in a regional context , which is what the RANs do , enabling members to react to a wider range of human rights violations in any given region .
12 For ornamental carving and small sculpture , there could be a wider range of smaller tools 10mm and under .
13 The offer was immediately rebuffed , however , by one of the two big generating companies being created under privatisation , which said it would seek fuel from a wider range of sources , including imported coal .
14 But , speaking at the same conference , Ed Wallis , chief executive of PowerGen , the company which will inherit a third of the Central Electricity Generating Board 's stations , warned : ‘ We plan to burn a wider range of fuels from a wider range of sources — and we owe it to our customers to get the best possible deal . ’
15 But , speaking at the same conference , Ed Wallis , chief executive of PowerGen , the company which will inherit a third of the Central Electricity Generating Board 's stations , warned : ‘ We plan to burn a wider range of fuels from a wider range of sources — and we owe it to our customers to get the best possible deal . ’
16 John Millington , principal training adviser for the Engineering Industry Training Board , says employers would like to see the present system streamlined , with fewer syllabuses and more emphasis on assessing a wider range of skills .
17 ‘ This is a way forward for the museum to offer a wider range of access points into the nation 's science and technology , ’ Professor Durant said .
18 It was spread across a wider range of banks , especially the ‘ large London branches of strongly capitalised foreign banks ’ .
19 With respect to the latter , for example , women are no longer excluded from night duty and they perform a wider range of section duties than before .
20 It 's a wider range of food than when we started , which was only in biscuits .
21 Also included in the IFM recommendations are a national angling centre with teaching facilities and offices and continuing the use of Anglers Consultative Associations but with a wider range of representaion of angling interests .
22 At the very least , the CEGB should be divided into a wider range of generating companies to stimulate competition .
23 It is feared that the process will lead to overbidding by outsiders hungry to get into television , which will oust existing contractors intending to invest more money in a wider range of programmes and with a more realistic view of the cost of running a service .
24 Delicatessens often stock a wider range of Mexican ingredients to enable you to produce authentically flavoured dishes .
25 The development of sophisticated photographic techniques and new technologies like DNA-fingerprinting have encouraged an increasing number of cetacean studies in the wild , gathering information not only from a wider range of species , but also in a wider range of contexts and environments .
26 The development of sophisticated photographic techniques and new technologies like DNA-fingerprinting have encouraged an increasing number of cetacean studies in the wild , gathering information not only from a wider range of species , but also in a wider range of contexts and environments .
27 Law firms could thus spread into a wider range of businesses , just as accountants have pushed into management consulting , and commercial banks into stockbroking .
28 By comparing the number of phyla , one can say , as Dr Gould does , that there was a wider range of life in one little patch of sea floor than in all today 's oceans — though that conclusion ignores the fact that today 's oceans contain whales , jellyfish , barnacles and octopuses , whereas the Burgess sea contained only little creepy-crawlies .
29 There is scarcely any corporate-bond market in Japan , because issuing costs are too high ; but if new rules bring those costs down and the market revives , it is likely to have a wider range of yields than before .
30 Metal lends itself to a wider range of decorative techniques than most other materials because of its physical properties , particularly its ductility , which allows it to be twisted into wire or inlaid with other metals and even other materials such as gemstones .
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