Example sentences of "[noun] [adv] of [noun sg] of [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Lighting seemed to be at one basic level regardless of time of day or night though was subtly achieved in the final scene .
2 She was involved in the London Women 's Film Group and the setting up of Cinema of Women in the late seventies ; then there was a sense of a political project , opportunities for women to meet and discuss ideas and motivations .
3 Birth measurements including weight , head circumference , length , and placental weight predicted blood pressure and plasma glucose , insulin , and fibrinogen concentrations independently of duration of gestation .
4 This proposes that all women should be entitled to maternity leave for 14 weeks regardless of length of service .
5 There are two years in which to implement the Directive , but implementing provisions relating to the entitlement to maternity leave for 14 weeks regardless of length of service are contained in the Trade Union Reform and Employment Rights Bill 1992 , which was published on 5 November .
6 But I fancied feeling the long hard pressure of ocean waves against our hull and , though we were short-handed , I reckoned that a few days out of sight of land would shake us all down quickly .
7 They also see that on page hundred and ninety nine , they have a picture here of crew of Rivetus and I was just getting about these names to mind , his radio operator 's name was , mine was .
8 Finally , he forecast a reduction both of length of credit and of balances , a rationalisation of in-house departments , and an increase of solus agreements .
9 and , and that really would lead to the of self not of detriment of self
10 Hyndman , now a keen supporter of the war , argued that Labour should be demanding general nationalization of industry in the name both of equality of sacrifice and of war-fighting efficiency .
11 It does not avoid difficult questions out of fear of unpopularity .
12 The question arises as to whether this is the result of their having fallen into apathy out of fear of repression and a belief that it is not possible to make progress ; or whether it is precisely because they have been making progress through existing channels that the militant challenge has withered .
13 The landing was invented by the U.S. We come in at 1,500ft out of range of fire .
14 We have watched the drying up of provision of aids and equipment .
15 Well really that 's l by and large what groups is all about so it 's clearly that they do and there 's some cases here of sort of cyclists cycling harder and faster when they 've got they 're training with other cyclists or erm when they 're training against the clock .
16 For the basic pot-au-feu , then , you need 2½ lb. approximately of flank of beef , 2½ lb. of shoulder , middle neck or breast of lamb ( it is the lamb which gives it its essentially Provençal character ) , 1 lb. of shin of veal .
17 This puts services which used to be available free from the hospital out of reach of patients on low income and those with chronic health conditions who require multidisciplinary care .
18 However , after having reached a position out of range of detection by the Cherbourg defences , P/O Atherton and his crew must have decided to circle and wait until they felt that the defences would have assumed that the attack was over and would therefore have relaxed their alertness .
19 Poorly trained managers who found themselves faced with new , rapidly changing technologies developed technophobia out of fear of things they did not understand .
20 These should be put on a properly raised bird table out of reach of vermin which are dangerous disease carriers .
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