Example sentences of "to a [adv] wide " in BNC.

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1 For what follows , I want to suggest , first , that the study of observable , historical television genres — the largely elementary , predominantly thematic categories of television schedules — needs to be underpinned by a much more complex understanding than we presently have of the theoretical genre of ‘ television narrative fiction ’ to which they belong ; and , second , that that understanding may best be approached by placing television narrative fiction in some definite historical and theoretical relationship to a yet wider generic category : that of novelistic discourse .
2 In the section on The Organization and Control of Schooling , we change the focus to a slightly wider context , considering in particular the balance between home and school and between local and central government .
3 David Kingston , Labour 's youthful looking candidate in the Willington by election , is known to a slightly wider audience , we can reveal .
4 These skills can be applied to a fairly wide range of tasks which can be tackled by the lowest achievers .
5 Thus high office remains accessible to a relatively wide range of royal kin and commoners wield significant power over the succession .
6 Moving back another step to a still wider canvas , the holiday as a whole should have an overall structure : preparations for the journey and the journey itself ; arrival at the holiday destination ; introductory shots of the immediate vicinity ; a day on the beach ; a visit to a place of interest ; night-life , and so on …
7 Given the complexity of many of the objects , and the almost endless possibilities of treatment that could have befallen them , the scientist needs the collaboration of the art historian , in addition to a very wide experience of antiquities and knowledge of the technical processes of the past , in order to reconstruct as much as possible of a particular object 's background history .
8 When Boniface was consecrated bishop by Pope Gregory II in 722 , it was not to a particular see , but to a very wide commission of preaching to heathens , such as , for instance , the Aquitanian St Amand had had in northern Gaul during the previous century .
9 The gastropods have become adapted to a very wide range of habitats , from high mountain streams to deep oceans , and each habitat type has its own species confined to it .
10 The General was a portly , ugly man , his manners were not refined , and his talk was conspicuous for an eagerness to apply military similes to a very wide variety of matters .
11 The knack in dowsing is to be in the right frame of mind , not caring too much what answer you get , but at the same time having a clear idea of what you are looking for , otherwise you are opening yourself up to a very wide ‘ waveband ’ and things will get very confused .
12 It also explains the precision that they are capable of , yet Polychromos Pastels are also blendable and workable in layers and are therefore adaptable to a very wide range of styles and techniques .
13 We have in this paper so far been much concerned with the systematic classroom development of teaching units , looking towards the publication of such units to a very wide audience .
14 Whole LRT double deck bus painted in colour to RBG individual design , including advertising panels inside and out , enabling us to get various types of information across to a very wide audience .
15 Some go on to postgraduate courses aimed at giving their degree a particular vocational emphasis , but a degree in Italian can lead to a very wide variety of careers .
16 In England GNVQs in Leisure and Tourism will be the introduction to a very wide span of vocations , including hotel and catering .
17 The word consultant lends itself to a very wide interpretation and many food service operators , and particularly hotel operators , believe they are all capable of being food service consultants .
18 Supermini class vehicles appeal to a very wide cross-section of people , giving this market sector the most diverse customer profile in the market .
19 Extending them to a substantially wider range of courses or students would , however , require primary legislation .
20 The technical trick that has made cheap laser-printers possible has also brought type design and typesetting to a far wider market .
21 The ICAA has also organised many exhibitions , bringing Christian art to a far wider audience than it experienced previously .
22 Even Volkswagen was getting in on the act with its two concept Varios ( see separate story ) , which could bring four-wheel-drive recreational motoring to a much wider audience .
23 The wording of the job advert can say much about the school and the direction in which it 's moving not only to potential applicants but to a much wider audience .
24 In passing , Lenin extended the general argument to a much wider audience , and without the earlier reservations :
25 In the 1930s , Donald Maxwell produced a series of guide books which introduced ley-hunting to a much wider audience until it became , in the words of The Birmingham Post , ‘ a new outdoor hobby ’ .
26 Similarly , some couples assiduously hang on to a sexual problem as a defence against facing up to a much wider problem in their marriage .
27 Leather goods , desk accessories , smoking accessories , tableware , the little playthings of the conspicuously affluent — Edouard knew that these , adorned with the de Chavigny name and crest , could be marketed for high prices and to a much wider market than that which could afford the most superlative jewellery in the world .
28 The B & B approach described in preceding sections can be adapted to a much wider class of problems than integer programming , and in this and the next section we will offer two examples .
29 If this policy was genuine , it soon gave way to a much wider attack which meant that no religious order survived in England after 1540 .
30 SCP is not eligible for rediscount with the Bank of England but it is attractive to a much wider range of investors than bankers ' acceptances , and it is widely held outside the banking sector by institutional investors such as insurance companies and pension funds .
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