Example sentences of "[adv] more [adj] for [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 It is anticipated that this type of hearing will be much more appropriate for small claims and will prove to be fairer , simpler and cheaper .
2 However , the problems of peripherality are much more severe for other regions which are already suffering the effects of the socalled North-South Divide .
3 Charity at 4 per cent interest was nothing to be ashamed of in the nineteenth century and it was much more commonplace for unsatisfactory tenants to be evicted than is the case today .
4 If we go to any local government official and talk to him about local government finance and how the council tax might work , he will say that it is nonsense and a case of trying to muddle through and paper over the cracks simply to make the package a little more presentable for electoral purposes .
5 The railways and roads were also made to focus on this point , making the area even more attractive for new industries .
6 There was FDP resentment at Adenauer 's domination of government , and over his consideration of an electoral reform which would make it even more difficult for small parties to be elected to the Bundestag .
7 This trend has been even more marked for rural areas ; figure 6.1 shows a decline of some 29 per cent in passenger journeys by rural buses between 1965 and 1975 .
8 And , ironically again , the increasing specialization of Greek scholarship made it increasingly more problematic for German writers to draw on Greek literature and its topoi as wholeheartedly as they once had .
9 Not only does it normally require an exceptionally large financial injection , but the rules of company law are considerably more demanding for public companies than for private ones or partnerships .
  Next page