Example sentences of "have a even [adj] " in BNC.

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1 They know as well as anyone else that Labour will have an even higher mountain to climb come the next general election as a result of Boundary Commission changes .
2 ’ Perhaps one would have an even greater fondness for the folio 1594 Biblia Graeca Septuaginta with which Doctor Johnson knocked down his temporary employer , the bookseller Osborne , when he accused his illustrious employee of negligence .
3 ‘ As it expands into the rural areas , it will have an even greater impact on traditional values and patterns of life , ’ he said , adding : ‘ The late advent of TV into Fiji may be a blessing in disguise .
4 ‘ As it expands into the rural areas , it will have an even greater impact on traditional values and patterns of life , ’ he said , adding : ‘ The late advent of TV into Fiji may be a blessing in disguise .
5 The drawing of graphs and diagrams are obvious examples , but simpler possibilities such as the creation of large characters and simple block diagrams may have an even greater psychological impact in the classroom .
6 With effect from the financial year 1991/92 , SSAPs will have an even greater role when , for example , depreciation accounting is introduced into the Health Authority hospitals and the Trust hospitals .
7 I hope that we will have an even greater response next year . ’
8 The House always appreciates the close interest which you , Mr. Speaker , take in Adjournment debates initiated by hon. Members on the Back Benches , but you will have an even greater personal interest than usual in this debate .
9 If Walter Smith is going to continue producing them out of a hat from the reserve team like this , Rangers will remain without peer and the rest will have an even greater excuse for abandoning hope before they start .
10 They claim the proposals could have an even bigger impact on the network than the Beeching report which led to widespread closures in the sixties .
11 With the CD we had the feeling that if there was no noise in the hall we could have an even better result .
12 ‘ In a couple of years I 'll have an even better horse than Grye . ’
13 It was not ‘ otium cum indignitate , ’ for who should have an even smaller room over mine , known as the horse boxes , but Mr William Gilliat , who later became the royal gynaecologist , and brought the Prince of Wales into this world .
14 If the companion is a helium main-sequence or white dwarf star , it will have an even smaller radius for a given mass and the conclusion remains valid .
15 On this occasion Mr David Butler will have an even finer collection of predictions to record in his book about the election than he did in 1970 , when almost every distinguished political correspondent of the time echoed Peter Jenkins of the Guardian in asking ‘ Why is Labour winning with such apparent ease ? ’ , just before Ted Heath won by a majority of 43 .
16 Does he agree that it is a sign of considerable leadership that , right in the teeth of the complexity of the negotiations at Maastricht , the Prime Minister should have recognised that the awesome events on the other side of Europe may have an even larger say in the history of Europe ?
17 Potentially , RISC programs may have an even larger number of calls since the complex instructions found in CISCs are subroutines in RISC I. Thus the procedure call must be as short as possible , perhaps only a few jumps .
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