Example sentences of "more [adv] with the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 But we should note , too , that language development itself , the acquisition of knowledge of symbolic meanings , is activated by the need to extend schematic knowledge so as to cope more effectively with the social environment .
2 Empowerment , which has its roots in the US , has taken on new significance recently as American corporations try to find a way to compete more effectively with the Japanese .
3 BA argued that it needed to acquire its smaller rival in order to be able to compete more effectively with the mega-airlines that had emerged , particularly in the US , during the previous two years .
4 The British Section is making a major commitment to a new computer system , which should both improve efficiency and help us work more flexibly with the national membership .
5 Inevitably , policy failures were attributed to the government and its officials , when the blame lay more widely with the whole of the community and in particular with the strong British dislike both for rethinking an entire situation and for the radical changes that might have to follow from such a reconsideration .
6 As we saw , this is the result of the fact that in human beings clearly-focused , specific sexual instincts have undergone a process of diffusion , displacement and generalization and have become associated rather more widely with the body and mind than may be true of other animals in whom these instincts still maintain a narrow and specialized role solely adapted to reproduction .
7 Throughout his year in Downing Street , Lord Home brooded on ways of coping more successfully with the pressures on government .
8 It is hard now to associate this restful hamlet with those who have set out to take part in events that have shaken the nation ; even more so with the lawless days of mob rule , savage revenge and gruesome murder .
9 and he 's encouraged us to put an application in to do more , more so with the training side of things
10 However , the world tourism market is fiercely competitive and becoming ever more so with the countries of Eastern Europe now opening up as holiday destinations .
11 Eight years on the problems have not decreased but they have increased er , even more so with the present problem of employers who tend to ignore health and safety using fear of unemployment to stop complaints .
12 erm , I think probably because our education system developed more so with the industrial change
13 The jackal as Wepwawet was the local god of Asyut , but also a god of cemeteries , being associated generally with Anubis and more especially with the cult of Osiris at Abydos .
14 Others identify more easily with the types we have looked at .
15 ULSTER people will be able to breathe more easily with the help of the Belfast Telegraph 's new Air Quality Bulletin .
16 The Soviet Union , under Gorbachev , broadened its relations more generally with the world community with Latin American states apart from Cuba , with the Vatican , with Israel , and even with South Africa .
17 Norcross found that the acquisition of a button-pressing task proceeded more rapidly with the first pair of stimuli than with the second .
18 By contrast members of that younger and more ‘ populist ’ group of abolitionists envisaged addressing the universal abolition of slavery through the British and Foreign Society for the Universal Abolition of Slavery and the Slave Trade — reorganised from the Agency in March 1834 — and more permanently with the British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society ( BFASS ) .
19 The mood of Bank Holiday reflects that of a nation knowing that war must come , but other films dealt more directly with the storm clouds building up on the other side of the Channel .
20 In The Dear Green Place , Archie Hind exposed the sap and pulp that was hidden under the hard shell of that surprisingly literary construct , ‘ Glasgow ’ , and then ‘ fell silent ’ ( by which the literary world apologised for Hind 's decision to communicate more directly with the city 's damaged youth ) .
21 It is now time to deal more directly with the tensions evident in the internal culture of the movement ; they were never entirely absent but the strains they imposed became increasingly hard to manage in the 1830s .
22 This is perhaps less of an issue now that Unix SVR4.2 has been modularised , and it is expected that UI will in future work more directly with the rest of the industry on interfaces and reference technologies around SVR4 — see page 2 .
23 Only during the 1980s did Korea begin to reduce its restrictions against foreign investment as an added means of linking more directly with the international system .
24 Here we are dealing much more directly with the small differences between samples , and considerable success has been claimed for groups of closely-related molecules .
25 Alternatively , p53 may interact more directly with the repair machinery , perhaps increasing its fidelity but delaying repair so that lesion-induced apoptotic signals are sustained .
26 In its first few lines , the rewritten passage now offers reasons for organising the essay in the way that has been chosen , and so connects the answer more directly with the question .
27 Alongside this industrial development are political developments , associated with the extension of the suffrage , involving citizens more thoroughly with the activities of the state .
28 This , so Dobry believed , would relieve the overloaded planning machine to deal more thoroughly with the major and/or controversial applications ( which he suggested would constitute less than a half and , it was to be hoped , only a third of the total ) .
29 Surveying the state of England in 1551 , Sir Thomas Smith dealt more circumstantially with the question of social status .
30 Bifurcation , which we mentioned earlier , can be seen as another product of law and order ideology , combined with the pragmatic imperative to do something to limit the numbers in custody : visibly dealing more harshly with the ‘ serious ’ offenders who can be most easily scapegoated ( in the popular press and the public mind ) , while dealing more leniently but less visibly with the much greater number of ‘ run of the mill ’ offenders , is an apparently rational response to a situation where one 's own rhetoric conflicts with practicalities .
  Next page