Example sentences of "[verb] the [noun] of many of " in BNC.
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1 | While the visuals usually tell the story , remember that we lose the support of many of the visual elements we get in realistic presentations — lip movements for example . |
2 | The financial guarantees and direct support provided by most Member States to their nationalised companies are likely to affect the impact of many of the ‘ competition Directives ’ , however well-meaning these may be . |
3 | Over recent months the Tomlinson Report recommended the closure of many of the , the , the country 's finest teaching hospitals with wi with within London . |
4 | Given the complexity of many of the objects , and the almost endless possibilities of treatment that could have befallen them , the scientist needs the collaboration of the art historian , in addition to a very wide experience of antiquities and knowledge of the technical processes of the past , in order to reconstruct as much as possible of a particular object 's background history . |
5 | This is an especially serious prospect for Britain , whose deeply rooted democratic institutions remain the envy of many of the other countries of the EEC . |
6 | So I was able to make excursions throughout the state , which is about the size of Hampshire , admiring its astonishing number of traditional country houses , and enjoying the company of many of their owners . |
7 | Until the potential political power of the millions of women who are disadvantaged in relation to paid and unpaid labour and in retirement is realised , policies to combat the poverty of many of those aged 60 and over are not likely to be forthcoming . |
8 | In each context , the major international instrument is a Convention elaborated under the aegis of the Hague Conference on Private International Law ; these conventions have attracted the support of many of the States most involved in international trade , and other regional agreements have been heavily influenced by the Hague models . |
9 | They have had to accept the loss of many of their former social roles , the loss of status , a declining ability to lead entirely independent lives . |
10 | Though it was completely lacking in originality its publication in Western Europe drew the admiration of many of the leading figures of the Enlightenment . |
11 | A lot of them are concerned and confused with the many different types of rose , so we will begin by describing them and explaining the meaning of many of the names you will come across — that will help you choose wisely , and without regretful afterthoughts . |
12 | He had by now forgotten the faces of many of the girls he had run around with , and Peter Dawson was dead , but there was still Isobel , the one steadying influence in his life . |
13 | The Nationalists would break the Union ( though they now talk reassuringly of the continuance of ‘ the social union ’ ) and the slogan of ‘ Independence in Europe ’ has caught the imagination of many of the young , because it allays the fears which the prospect of separation has always aroused . |
14 | First , because it is evident that many of the problems which the Authority identified in 1985 when it established PNP were centred as much on professional attitudes as professional expertise — attitudes to children , to curriculum , to teaching methods , to parents , to ethnic minority groups , to gender issues — and indeed we have picked up and reported the resilience of many of the attitudes which the Authority sought to change . |
15 | These include the highly specialized nature of much of the technical analysis , the limited capacity for checking the accuracy of many of the findings of this kind of research and the consequent need for the development of knowledge-based inference machines for extracting useful information from secondary and often proxy data . |
16 | This meant that they had now gained a tremendous advantage over the reptiles , even causing the extinction of many of them . |
17 | Shelford , part of Mark McCormack 's International Management Group which handles the interests of many of the world 's top sporting celebrities , has bypassed the laws on amateurism by working for a company whose main activity is the promotion of the All Blacks captain . |
18 | Clear the roads of many of its traffic jams and causes of accidents |
19 | ‘ Fuck art — let's dance ’ was not only one of their idioms , but possibly the best way of describing the feelings of many of these new dance bands . |
20 | Archaeological and landscape studies have also shown the antiquity of many of the assumed secondary hamlets . |
21 | An enlightened paternalist , he was happier in his relations with the students and shaped the careers of many of them . |
22 | Recently Sampson has challenged the status of many of the alleged linguistic ‘ universals ’ put forward by Chomskians . |
23 | The final phrase carried a suggestion that they might be willing to fight for the League , but it seems unlikely that this thought had crossed the minds of many of the young gentlemen who voted for it . |
24 | When Maori and non-Maori controls were compared the prevalence of many of the known risk factors was higher in Maori infants . |
25 | What we intend to do in this chapter is discuss the inferential structure that forms the backbone of many of the methods of data collection currently in use . |
26 | It is a perfectly satisfactory word processor but lacks the sparkle of many of the currently available rivals ; Word , WordPerfect , Volkswriter and so on . |
27 | Until recent changes in the structure of the civil service , designed to reduce barriers between the various grades and to stress the importance of many of the managerial roles played in connection with policy implementation , it was possible to draw a fairly clear distinction between the ‘ administrative class ’ , containing the ‘ higher ’ civil servants responsible for policy , and the rest of the civil service . |
28 | After considering the views of many of Scotland 's active climbers on the sue of bolts in Scottish rock climbing , the MCofS offers the following policy which it is hoped will act as a guideline to all climbers ( present , future and visiting ) , on bolt use in Scotland . |
29 | The working class in capitalist societies has enjoyed , in the long term , a rise in the standard of living , and labour movements have won enough welfare concessions to ease the lot of many of the poor . |
30 | What was perhaps vital was that Vogel 's view of the causes of Japanese prosperity echoed the statements of many of Japan 's leaders . |