Example sentences of "[am/are] often in " in BNC.
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1 | For one thing they 're often in very tiny print . |
2 | We 're not about cynically smothering access to justice with a cynical morass of restrictions cut and downright cynical regard for the rights of people who 're often in a vulnerable position . |
3 | When someone is ill with AIDS they are often in pain . |
4 | Remember , if you are often in contact with young children , either at home or in your job , you run a higher risk of catching German Measles . |
5 | However , settlement payments by the record company or publishing company are often in excess of £100,000 , while the accountant 's fees are measured in tens of thousands . |
6 | This is why many Georgian and Victorian houses are out on their own , whereas William and Mary and Queen Anne houses are often in the middle of villages , where the original manor had always stood . |
7 | The rights of presentation to livings in the Church of England , known as advowsons , which are often in the hands of laymen , are also regarded as interests in land . |
8 | Christian people are often in this category , discussing issues that concern them within the trusted confines of their church fellowship or house group . |
9 | Artists , and great artists , are often in this dilemma . ’ |
10 | Hedges and ditches , especially those separating a ridge crest from a valley side or channelling water safely along a valley floor , are often in critical positions to stop runoff . |
11 | Alternatively , you could take a holiday specifically with the aim of windsurfing , as these carefully chosen centres are often in pleasant holiday surroundings . |
12 | They are often in urgent need of advice and information about the financial , practical and emotional support available . |
13 | Even in your decisions , you find you are often in turmoil and do not know where to turn . |
14 | Remember , if you are often in contact with young children , either at home or in your job , you run a higher risk of catching German Measles . |
15 | Those less in touch with the feeling , or unconsciously consumed by repressed but unmitigated envy from their own infancy , are often in trouble when a real baby is part of the married scene . |
16 | Causes of uncertainty are often in the area of giving and receiving instructions and in making sure that information is correctly understood . |
17 | Your mitochondria — the tiny structures inside muscle cells which supply the energy to get you moving — are often in tatters , and small blood vessels leading into your muscles look like construction sites . |
18 | As a result planners are often in ignorance . |
19 | One fact that contradicts it immediately is that women are often in the vanguard of linguistic change towards the standard variety . |
20 | Usually it 's quite a problem to know what to do with them , though they are often in demand for decorations at your local primary school , but between you and your knitting club friends there will be more than enough for everyone . |
21 | Suitably sized shells are often in short supply and in some areas this limits the hermit crab population . |
22 | Both locomotives can normally be seen at the Didcot Railway Centre in Oxfordshire where they are often in action on Steamdays . |
23 | Similarly , retired racing Greyhounds are often in need of homes , and although temperamentally these dogs are normally quite sound , it can be very difficult to persuade them not to chase cats and other smaller dogs when they are out for a walk . |
24 | This means they are often in the hands of high officials or the extremely rich — the very people who are hardest to persuade to give up their illegal captives . |
25 | When first imported they are often in almost freshwater , but will appreciate an addition of salt as they are really a marine fish that can exist in freshwater for a while . |
26 | Tropical grasses like maize are often in more of a hurry — their sugar-precursors have four carbon atoms . |
27 | However , Butler argues ( rather effectively ) that the belief that they are often in conflict , even in this world , is a mistake . |
28 | These are often in sequences which are useful and logical ( Monday , Tuesday ; or week 1 , week 2 , and so on ) . |
29 | In this country much of that experience is differentiated along class lines : crudely , the very well-off use the predominantly single-sex public and boarding school system to accustom their children to an elite future , and the middle class ensure that their neighbourhood state school reinforces the values of their children 's socialisation at home and that , in a streamed system , their children are all in the higher streams ; meanwhile , working-class children are largely concentrated in the less well-resourced state schools , are often in the lower streams , and are frequently regarded by their teachers and even encouraged to think of themselves as ‘ no-hopers ’ . |
30 | This relationship does mean , however , that they are often in the best position within the multidisciplinary team to coordinate their patients ' care , ‘ liaising ’ with other professionals and acting as a ‘ spokesperson ’ by ‘ disseminating ’ appropriate information . |