Example sentences of "and [prep] [noun prp] " in BNC.
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1 | The oesophageal mucosa was graded as normal if no erosions or ulcerations were present in the tubular oesophagus ; as oesophagitis if a mucosal break with exudate ( erosions and/or ulcerations ) was present ; and as Barrett 's if specialised ( intestinal ) columnar epithelium was present . |
2 | He is able to refer to God by such names as Rāma and K a , which are specifically Hindu names , and as Ahuramazda , which is the Zoroastrian name for the God of light . |
3 | Mitchum emerged with his popularity intact and as RKO 's biggest star . |
4 | And as Lewis ( who had already read through the statement ) watched his chief going through the same pages , he felt more than a little encouraged . |
5 | Defeat in Canada merely sharpened France 's desire for revenge in Europe and as October gave way to November conditions in the Channel and Bay of Biscay worsened , making it ever harder for the British squadrons to hold their stations . |
6 | Her forthright depictions of female passion made her a target for satire , most notably as Bridgetina Botherim in Memoirs of Modern Philosophers ( 1800–1 ) by Elizabeth Hamilton [ q.v. ] , and as Lady Gertrude Sinclair in Edmund Oliver ( 1798 ) by Charles Lloyd [ q.v . ] . |
7 | With 153 centuries and a highest score of 280 , not out , against Nottinghamshire in 1921 , it is fair to describe him as one of the most acquisitive bats of all time , and as Hampshire 's most successful cricketer . |
8 | If the facts fall within s.16(2) it is immaterial that the accused did not actually obtain a pecuniary advantage ( DPP v Turner ) , and as MPC v Charles , above , demonstrates , there is no requirement that the person deceived suffers a financial loss . |
9 | And as Mary Douglas ( 1973 : 15 ) had pointed out , ‘ if we can not bring the argument back from tribal ethnography to ourselves , then there is little point in starting it at all ’ . |
10 | He appeared to Abraham as his shield ( Genesis 15:1 ) and as God Almighty ( " El Shaddai " , Genesis 17:1 ) . |
11 | The principal fears engendered by what has been called the revolution in reproduction are created by ignorance ; and as George Corner , who helped to lay the foundations for the new reproductive technology , foresaw , lack of understanding leads to fears , inhibitions and blind taboos . |
12 | Since its foundation in 1961 , the NDP had established itself as the most successful social democratic party in north America , and as Canada 's third main party at federal level . |
13 | Hoyle was appointed to Norbury Chapel and Poynton Chapel in March 1795 , and as Chaplain to the Poynton , Worth , Norbury and Bullock Smithy Volunteers in 1803 . |
14 | Such awareness provided another means for the obsessive anxieties of the establishment to be counterbalanced from within , and as Jacobi ( 1967 : 22 ) suggests , created the potential ability to look truths in the eye and ‘ the courage to renounce what is no longer compatible ’ . |
15 | If Moxon , still young in captaincy terms , were to be given the job there would be a strong argument in favour of a team manager and as Illingworth , perhaps wisely , has rejected one offer to return ( from Leicestershire ) Yorkshire might look at another native son who has , from all accounts , done an excellent job in his first year of managment at Somerset , Jack Birkenshaw . |
16 | As Lord Wrenbury said in O'Rourke v. Darbishire [ 1920 ] A.C. 581 , 626–627 ( and as Neill L.J . |
17 | And as Friday 13th drew the week to a close , City computer users viewed their screens nervously . |
18 | They are found in such widely differing ballets as MacMillan 's Romeo and Juliet and The invitation and as Ashton 's Enigma Variations and A Month in the Country . |
19 | For 10 years , the star has enjoyed a high profile as Del Boy in Only Fools and Horses and as Pa Larkin in The Darling Buds of May . |
20 | From about June onward there are navigable waterways through the Barents , Kara and Bering seas and along much of the Siberian coast ( the ‘ northeast passage ’ ) , though heavy pack ice usually persists between the mainland and Severnaya Zemlya and off Wrangel Island . |
21 | They flicked on and off Slater started laughing as Graham shook his head and walked away up Rosebery Avenue . |
22 | This species has been recorded primarily from the Caribbean and off Florida but Ljungman ( 1871 ) records it from the Josephina Bank , W. of Portugal in 210–410 m . |
23 | His grandfather was retired Navy , action in the Pacific and off Korea , where he had his own command . |
24 | This totally unexplained mystery took place in the 1950s in a siding that ran parallel to Fish Dock Road , a main arterial road leading on and off Grimsby Fish Docks . |
25 | Just short of the entrance to the Estrecho de Magellanes they had encountered gale-force winds and off Cabo Virgenes the tow had begun to sheer violently and range up on the tug . |
26 | This species has been recorded from the eastern Atlantic from the Bay of Biscay and off Madeira 1300–2034 m . |
27 | ‘ Go on then , ’ he would say , coaxingly , and off Jasper would go in the direction he knew was right . |
28 | Go and off Margaret , go on . |
29 | Spring passage commonly extends from early March to late May , but sea-watching results from Selsey Bill since 1960 consistently show that the passage peaks in the first three weeks of April , and off Beachy Head Cooper ( 1975 ) found a marked peak between 11 and 20 April . |
30 | ’ And off Paddy went once more into his professional mumble . |