Example sentences of "[verb] [adv] [adv] [adj] [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | The group of Mannaia lineages most closely involved in the earlier bloodshed and the anti-Tibbu movement provided six committee members of whom two became chairmen , a high proportion given their numbers , and a high ratio of chairmen to members . |
2 | The Staatskanzlei , which controlled the day-to-day administration of foreign policy , had already been reorganised and made rather more efficient at the beginning of his period in office . |
3 | ‘ I 'm well aware of whom they 're for , ’ he bit out , and Ellie belatedly became rather frighteningly aware of the dangerous quality in him that had only been hinted at before . |
4 | In one study , necropsy was undertaken in about half of the patients who died , and showed graft occlusion only in patients given aprotinin . |
5 | He goes only slightly pink at the sight of her Lesbian Switchboard T-shirt , speaks enthusiastically of his congregation 's Social Action Committee and seminars on Issues of the Day . |
6 | Yet we rub along well most of the time . |
7 | It offers so very much to the young people who go there and also has a lot to offer adults . |
8 | Intel Corp , obliquely confirming nagging reports that Pentium chips will be in critically short supply at least until October , now says it will ship only about 100,000 of the chips by the end of the year , where only two months ago it was talking ‘ hundreds of thousands ’ of parts this year ; Intel now sees 10,000 Pentiums going out by the end of June , 40,000 in the third quarter , and some 50,000 in fourth . |
9 | Then she laid down as many of the others as she could fit in the space . |
10 | Due to unforeseen problems , they became so heavily involved in the project that both found it necessary to develop new skills which led to them becoming competent programmers in their own right . |
11 | Everett , an extremely experienced chartered accountant , was captivated by Hayling and became personally very interested in the paper and the job opportunities it would create . |
12 | Much footway damage is natural deterioration of course , but it has been estimated that overriding by vehicles is implicated in over half of the cases where planned maintenance work is carried out . |
13 | This ‘ great perturbation in nature ’ ( V.i.9f. ) causes her to reveal all their deeds , an effect made much more intense in the theatre by the Doctor writing down all that she says , so that hypocrisy is not only detected but recorded . |
14 | Queen Philippa died in August 1369 , and the removal of her influence may have hastened a deterioration in his character which became all too apparent in the 1370s . |
15 | As that chapter points out , the underlying principles of the Labour government 's approach in the late 1970s — Partnership between central and local government , and consensus and cooperation — became much less fashionable in the following decade . |
16 | It also meant that I became much more familiar with the area I lived in and the people around . ’ |
17 | The second meant that local authorities became heavily involved in researching into the numbers of disabled and attempting to assess their needs , and the public became much more aware of the whole problem of disability . |
18 | Although the formula related MLR was considered a more satisfactory system at the outset , the new system itself was found to be lacking when interest rates became much more volatile in the mid-1970s : high and variable inflation was accompanied by sharp changes in interest rate expectations and in the term structure of short term rates . |
19 | Now erm I suppose more recently coming up the present , coming away from nineteenth century Vienna into erm I suppose really I suppose the nineteen seventies , nineteen eighties , people became much more interested in the issue of child sex abuse again and this was n't really because of any great developments in clinical psychology or psychiatry . |
20 | Photographs and a more detailed physical description of the body may finally identify it , but a diary found so much lower on the mountain is unlikely to throw new light on how the two men died . |
21 | Classification scatters as it collocates , since it groups primarily by the features listed in only one of the facets applied in classifying a document . |
22 | The research found that the take up of prepared training material occurred in only half of the boards studied . |
23 | A polystyrene box , or even cardboard box filled with loads of scrunched up newspaper will help keep the water from cooling down too much on the way home . |
24 | The industrial scene thus looked much more alarming in the early months of 1 978 . |
25 | However , their low cost ( Notes retails at around £400 , WFWG at £149 ) and ease of implementation make them a viable proposition for the small company , and will probably result in their becoming much more influential in the long term . |
26 | During the process of consultation on Mezey , regional officers were therefore becoming much more aware of the issues , the opportunities and the constraints . |
27 | Sailing is becoming much more popular in the UK and from the USA comes a warning about personal standards of responsibility while enjoying water-related recreation . |
28 | I then want you to write down as many of the words as you can remember and in any order you wish . |
29 | Henry gave Lewes Priory to the minister responsible for the dissolution , Thomas Cromwell , who used what remained of his life before his execution for treason in 1540 to pull down as much of the buildings as possible . |
30 | The road to an egalitarian society , therefore , lies not so much through the social services , even broadly defined and purposefully designed , but through changes in the economic and political institutions of the country which generate and shape inequality . |