Example sentences of "[verb] [verb] far " in BNC.

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1 Sometimes they can be heard bellowing far away on the shoreline in very great numbers .
2 The legislation was welcomed by the Prime Minister , but Walesa was said to object that it failed to go far enough in changing the 1952 Stalinist constitution .
3 The legislation was welcomed by the Prime Minister , but Walesa was said to object that it failed to go far enough in changing the 1952 Stalinist constitution .
4 We must define the Europe that we want to see far beyond Maastricht and how we believe that the Maastricht summit can assist in achieving that Europe .
5 The motor skills domain has received far less attention than the cognitive and affective , and objectives in this field are perhaps best devised from a study of the way skills are learned .
6 There is another set of behaviours that has this characteristic and that has received far more attention .
7 The idea of deterrence by denial , of making one 's own society hard to conquer , has a good historical record but has received far less attention .
8 I personally find it repulsive to handle dead creatures or to ‘ gut ’ them for cooking , but it is not an attitude to commend in professionals like surgeons , veterinarians , nurses , forensic and medical scientists , service and police personnel , even mortuary attendants , undertakers , and butchers , who will regularly need to perform far more unsavoury tasks with equanimity .
9 they appear to go far beyond community care guidance contained in the Laming/Foster circulars of last year , which simply asked SSDs to develop a purchaser/provider split according to local circumstances , and most SSDs have introduced only limited contracting .
10 Born and educated in the city , but subsequently crowned with an Oxford MA and a Harvard MBA , Miss Forbes was considered to have exceptional abilities and was expected to go far .
11 The comic has travelled far from schoolboy stories of daring-do to sophisticated art form .
12 A chip built with quiterons would need to lose far less heat than a conventional one , so the devices could be more closely packed on a chip .
13 We do n't need to go far .
14 Painting is the art of reaching the soul through the eyes , but if the picture appeals to the eyes and never reaches the soul , the painter has fallen far short of his aim .
15 This , conveniently , is at a time when sterling has fallen far enough against the Deutschemark to make it potentially competitive within ERM .
16 Even the most fiendish human torturer has fallen far short of the agony provided by this small , shallow-water fish .
17 Switch from comprehensive to third party motor insurance if your car 's value has fallen far enough .
18 ‘ I do n't believe that Scotland has fallen far down the pecking order of top rugby nations .
19 The reality has fallen far short of these early expectations .
20 The teaching approach in these subject areas is designed to go far beyond the basic development of psycho-motor skills .
21 Since the 1960s the problem of South Africa , which goes beyond the scope of the present survey , has placed far greater strains on Commonwealth sporting links than ever before .
22 What about the situation in which , on the one hand , many households have no contact with wage labour and are wholly dependent for reproduction on state benefits and , on the other , wage labour has penetrated far further into other households because of the importance of female employment ?
23 However , handwriting recognition has attracted far less research investment than speech , possibly due to the less ’ glamorous ’ image it possesses .
24 Here it will be fed into computer models where it is expected to provide far more accurate predictions of the effects of deforestation .
25 Now he has to work far harder .
26 Out of court he has to work far into the night , night after night , working hard and continuously at a mass of detail .
27 If de Klerk can convince the world that South Africa has come far enough in improving its record on human rights , sanctions will be lifted and crucial foreign capital will start flowing into the country .
28 THE news that certain banks are to be rapped for delaying interest rate cuts has come far too late for the owners of thousands of small businesses .
29 Human nature and human achievements have come to appear far more ambiguous than the progressive hopes of the nineteenth century admitted .
30 We would need to know far more about the actual course of study students had been following , albeit briefly , under Vial , before we could accept that Coleman maliciously reduced it , and that his motive , as claimed by Smith , was mercenary self-interest ( the 20 guineas student 's fee going into his pocket ) .
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