Example sentences of "more [adv] [vb pp] [coord] " in BNC.

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1 Also , the seams are more intensely faulted and folded than those in Yorkshire ( see map A on page 102 ) .
2 I first heard and reviewed a pair of SD Ribbons several years ago ; to look at , the design has scarcely changed in that time , except that it is now obviously more professionally engineered and finished .
3 Towns , which have been more intensively studied and for which there is generally more documentary and cartographic information , were thought to be organic or haphazard creations until recently .
4 The rail network supported by the PTE is smaller than in Manchester with 88 route miles ( 142 route km ) and 74 stations , but it is more intensively used and largely electrified .
5 The research carried out so far has established some useful ideas and models which could be more intensively investigated and has established guidelines for future clinical trials .
6 Nevertheless , some wooded areas were more intensively settled and used as time went on .
7 The two regions were more industrially developed and russified and showed little support for the IRP .
8 On the contrary , it is possible that greater training in counselling skills may lead to a more skilfully directed and efficient interview .
9 It may be that those aspects of a curriculum , such as skills which are readily expressible in behavioural terms could usefully be laid down in some detail while other aspects , such as problem solving would be more loosely specified or , perhaps , not specified at all .
10 The former ( eg , Mitsui , Mitsubishi , Sumitomo , Fuji , Sanwa and Dai-Ichi Kangyo ) tend to be more loosely affiliated and more diversified .
11 It is similar in type to the Simmental , though more elegantly built and the coat colour bright red rather than yellowish tan , and it shares the same origins in the old Bernese brought in by Mennonites during the eighteenth century ( see Alpine section ) .
12 People that had once been poor , often virtually on the breadline , were now much more elegantly dressed and had achieved a far higher standard of living .
13 For a number of years they have been producing the yachts in their range in both standard and Master versions , the latter being more luxuriously appointed and intended for private ownership .
14 In the lower reaches of the forest , then , there is a constant but low level of presentation of a few flowers dealt with by low but more or less constant densities of animals , whereas in the upper layers , the flowers are more conspicuously advertised and draw such animals as birds , which are wider-ranging and with good sight , as well as the local , more stationary pollinators from lower in the forest .
15 Many publishers prefer to deal with the street booksellers rather than the formal bookshops because they are better business : they pay more , are more commercially motivated and are closer to the public .
16 It is reassuring to note that the burden which such women carry has been more widely recognised and discussed in the past 10–15 years .
17 This is partly because we think they should be more widely recognized but also because they can also be wonderfully informative and entertaining .
18 In recent years this has been more widely recognized and both doctors and nurses have increasingly made a specialty of the care of the aged .
19 At the same time child abuse , following a national pattern , was becoming more widely acknowledged and symptoms recognised .
20 The role of families and of informal neighbourhood care is much more widely acknowledged and various projects to support the carers and stimulate neighbourhood networks are under way .
21 This leads to a process of amplification or snowballing : individuals who are caught and labelled as criminal see themselves so and act accordingly , thus the label becomes more widely applied and firmly fixed , and the criminal becomes more attached to that label .
22 Thanks to , among others , John Robinson and the radical theologians , however , the way has been paved for humanist concerns to become more widely accepted and for the established Church to lose its importance in the areas of both public and private morality .
23 Althusser 's theory of history has been more widely attacked and denigrated than any other aspect of his work , largely because he dared to argue that , far from providing the unassailable foundation of Marxism , history was a problematic concept even in Marx 's own texts :
24 Usually , however , the production area is more widely scattered and the exact relationship with a given small town is harder to define .
25 Were trees once more widely distributed and more abundant before the onset of human interference , intensive grazing , moor burning , and blanket-bog development ?
26 More recently , interest revived when barbel became more widely distributed and anglers began to throw aside the class barriers and choose a quarry on its own merits rather than choose a fish by virtue of the fact that is has , or has not , an adipose fin .
27 Where spray bottles are more widely used and there is a risk of confusion colour coding is desirable and such a provision would take precedence over our control needs .
28 I am not trying to suggest that there is some conspiracy at work to centralise the importance of Shakespeare when it should be more widely shared or go to some other figure .
29 At the same time , as a result of Spanish-American fiction 's growing popularity , the work of the earlier writers mentioned became more widely known and some of them went on to enhance their reputation by producing new works in the 1960s and 1970s .
30 It is hoped that the number of staff involved in Academic Link will increase as the scheme becomes more widely known and its reputation grows .
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