Example sentences of "new [coord] [adv] [adv] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Conrad now conceived a new and even more grandiose strategy .
2 She embarked on a new and even more enigmatic liaison with an Italian anthropologist of satanic reputation who in the fullness of time turned out to be — indeed , for some time , unrecognized by the British , had been — a structuralist .
3 Once the father was imprisoned , new and even more disturbing allegations began to emerge from the children .
4 A new and probably more reliable set of data from the University of Pennsylvania ( see Summers and Heston , 1988 ) may well displace the World Bank tables as the best available source .
5 Today sees the debut of a number of new and not so new summer signings .
6 By 1926 new and much more powerful express passenger and freight locomotive designs had been prepared to his directions and , whilst these were nullified by opposition within a divided management structure , in 1927 the Royal Scot express locomotives were introduced for principal main-line services .
7 First , on the general anti-fraud provisions contained in the Securities Act 1933 or the Securities Exchange Act 1934 ( SEA ) , as developed by case law ; and second , on what has recently emerged as the SEC 's new and potentially most potent weapon — the misappropriation theory .
8 He had set Mosley and the BUF on a new and far more dangerous course .
9 They started to use the fast wheel , which enabled them to create new and far more refined shapes with thinner walls .
10 The Government remain committed to the Anglo-Irish Agreement unless and until agreement can be reached on new and more broadly satisfactory arrangements .
11 In February 1987 it secured only 6.4% — less than the 11.8% won by the Progressive Democrats , a new party whose emergence seemed at that time to betoken the awakening of a new and more specifically political consciousness among Irish voters .
12 As a relatively new and very fast growing sector , the information technology ( IT ) industry has , perhaps inevitably , suffered shortages of qualified labour ( see Connor/Pearson , 1986 ; NCC , 1985 ) .
13 Bernard was at the least reckoning an ambitious yeoman , the kind we expect to find purchasing land , like the Chibnalls of Sherington , not selling — unless , of course , he had done so in order to finance the purchase of his lease , or to stock the new and very much bigger farm ; but this is pure speculation .
14 ‘ The attraction , ’ I announce , ‘ is her new and so far unrequited passion .
15 It 's proving very difficult raising money for the sea wall because everybody likes to contribute towards buying something new but not so many like to repair something you have already got .
16 When writing on a less metaphysical level , and in face of the paintings themselves , even Apollinaire had to admit that the subject played an important part , and that the realism of the movement lay in its attempt to make a totally new but nevertheless very concrete statement about the visual world .
17 Also noteworthy is the new but so far untried National Vocational Qualification ( NVQ ) system that will use a national modularized competency-based set of training packages and standards to provide training and advancement opportunities for paraprofessional social service personnel ( NISW and SCA , 1989 ) .
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