Example sentences of "more of [art] [noun sg] of [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Jim Dine , on a trip to Norway , describes Munch 's The Scream as ‘ more of a caricature of Angst than the real thing ’ , while Sean Scully waxes lyrical about how the colours in his Manhattan bathroom remind him of Matisse .
2 It may involve one or more of a range of assessment activities from informal observation to oral , practical , or written procedures .
3 Make us more of a church of soldiers , Lord , equipped by the Holy Spirit for Christian service and daily battle .
4 ‘ I think there was much more of a sense of rivalry between them , ’ he told me .
5 Do you think there was more of a sense of community then or
6 Do you think there was more of a sense of sort of community in those days ?
7 The New Right emphasis on adversary politics and an overload of demands has been more of a critique of democracy in Britain than it has ever been a rigorous description of , and explanation for , British politics .
8 ‘ And if he 's lost any of his sharpness , he has the ability and intelligence to adjust his game and become more of a supplier of goals than scorer .
9 It would be natural to assume that this attempt to create a rift between Offa and the papacy occurred before the visit of the legates in 786 and that the visit was part of a process of reconciliation , but this is not wholly justified for Hadrian 's letter could date to the late rather than the mid-780s , and reflect hostility to one or more of a number of Offa 's actions .
10 As a result , investigators are finding situations where the methane could come from one or more of a number of sources .
11 THE seller who makes a false statement in connection with the supply of goods can find himself liable in one or more of a number of ways .
12 The analysis of labour markets is complicated further by the fact that they can be defined by reference to one or more of a number of characteristics .
13 The term is now used more commonly in a broad sense in which it connotes a looser grouping of individuals , each exercising power and united by one or more of a number of features such as wealth , social origins or pre-eminence in achievement in a particular field .
14 When he was approached at the end of 1987 to become the Pru 's finance director he was tempted away , partly because the tremendous growth of PW had created ‘ more of a loss of identity as individual partners ’ and partly because it offered a new and exciting role .
15 Although this sector has rarely produced a highly organised and successful political movement , it is becoming more of a source of protest , that is gaining significance in contemporary Latin America .
16 FIGURE 5 After the initial laying in of colour I began to introduce more of a feeling of form to the objects while retaining the strong sense of pattern
17 Shifting more of the cost of training to the private sector in this way might have posed a problem , even in a buoyant economy .
18 The third major development in Keynesian macroeconomics is the growing literature on ‘ prices versus quantities ’ : when there is a nominal demand shock , why do quantities ( output and employment ) bear more of the onus of adjustment than prices ( money wages and the absolute price level ) ?
19 It is to discover something more of the pain of God , the hurt to which he is so constantly exposed , even now , after Sinai , and after Golgotha .
20 The conventional style , gears , whether they 've been power or or manual , as develops erm more of the sort of business on those type applications , yeah , then basically it increases overall share and then it puts pressure on the business that we 've got on the other D group ball bearings .
21 The woman would think she was avid for more of the background of Benedict Beckenham , which indeed she was , but it was scarcely polite to show it !
22 Instead she 'd accepted his suggestion to show her more of the island of Zealand , and had been enchanted by everything , painfully aware that the spell which had entrapped her emanated from the powerful persona of the man beside her as much as the natural beauty of the surrounding countryside .
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