Example sentences of "far more [adv] [verb] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | For this they prepared a comparative study to show that the lockout was far more extensively used by German employers than by employers elsewhere ( Schregle , 1981 ) . |
2 | Nevertheless , around one in two Germans in both the American and the British Zones — and a percentage on the increase — thought that National Socialism had basically been a good idea , badly carried out , and were far more favourably disposed to it than to communism . |
3 | On the other hand there was the demand , often locally generated , usually far more enthusiastically supported by parents and teachers , for an education which would produce a competent and reasonably docile junior civil servant , a clerk , storekeeper , interpreter or later an assistant this or junior that to work under a white colonial officer . |
4 | Exemptions from selective service were far more easily gained by the wealthy and influential than by working-class families , and as the casualty lists grew , it was the latter who were being most affected . |
5 | Such calls have be.en made by Hudson ( 1981 ) for conservation , although they are far more frequently made by agricultural economists and agronomists who are concerned with interactive research by farmers and research stations ( Biggs 1981 ) . |
6 | It is far more frequently found upon the upperlips of Kirk ministers than those of Catholic priests . |
7 | German business ventures were , from the very start , far more closely tied to an efficient funding system and to government policy than in most other industrialised European countries . |
8 | As the perspective on teacher education widens to span the whole career of the teacher and as the work of teacher-preparation courses becomes far more closely linked to the |
9 | These housing criteria are far more closely associated with social class than the official housing density standards . |
10 | Radical reform is far more closely associated with the feminist movement . |
11 | This one , however , was to be far more personally taxing for Mrs Whitehouse , for the apparent consensus of opinion that surrounded her campaign against Thorsen evaporated as quickly as it had developed . |
12 | In the non-monetarized society , the individual is likely to be tied to activities which are far more tightly constrained by the necessities of daily life . |
13 | Since the prime function of many layers of middle management has been to transmit information which can be far more efficiently transmitted by modern technology , there is now no longer any need for their employment . |
14 | In the 1860's the French anthropologist and anatomist , Pierre Paul Broca called attention to the fact that language disorders ( termed ‘ aphasias ’ ) were far more commonly observed after damage to the left hand side of the brain . |
15 | He believed that public outrage about the prostitution trade could be far more usefully channelled into forming local vigilante groups , as residents in the St Jude 's Parish of King 's Cross had done . |
16 | But it was an action far more deeply rooted in the local and social customs of Scotland than in its political traditions . |