Example sentences of "[prep] [adj] [noun] [prep] [adv] the " in BNC.

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1 Will he consult with our right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for Social Security about how the availability for work rule might impede people , particularly the adult unemployed , in obtaining useful training which might enable them to return to work ?
2 She 'd gone about this project in entirely the wrong manner .
3 ‘ Because if you do n't keep your lover away from her I 'll have the two of you off this island with twice the speed of those rockets out there .
4 For further information on either the camera or the upgrade contact : K. G. Corfield Ltd. 6 John Street , London , WC1N 2ES .
5 It has been advanced for some time by both the Liberal party and the Electoral Reform Society .
6 At thirty-two , he was young enough not to look completely haggard , even after thirty-six hours with only the odd hour 's sleep , but his dark hair was plastered to his head and the brown eyes were sunk back in his head and reddened with smoke and exhaustion .
7 Sun 's Scott McNealy says the deal was forged after long-term discussions on how the two companies could work together .
8 While one takes into account the concern of Calvin and the reformers for the balance between the light of scripture and the inner light and direction given to individuals an experience vouchsafe for countless times in both the Old and New Testaments also remembering our lord 's own use of silence in prayer and I believe the increasing use of silence in modern worship and may I also say how very impressed I was by Dr 's prayer at the opening of this assembly in which he asked for the guidance of God and indeed your own equally eloquent prayer on Sunday evening Moderator open to the prompting and leading and guiding of God 's spirit .
9 At the present time , there are grounds for similar concern about both the public and the private sector .
10 The aim is to stimulate economic activity and make the planning system responsive to newly emerging forms of economic activity in both the town and countryside .
11 However , it is difficult to agree with those historians who see 1688 – 9 as a major watershed in early modern English history , which altered the basic issues of political life at both the national and local level .
12 Yet these contexts are set by the parameters of political discourse in exactly the same manner as the conceptual vocabulary of academics and practitioners structures their own treatment of the same issues .
13 The objective will be to identify the financial effect of each transaction on both the company and its creditors or debtors .
14 The Supreme Court enjoys an effective if indirect and delayed veto over legislation and executive actions , and its decisions where based on the Constitution may only be overridden by constitutional amendment ( involving the approval of two-thirds majorities of both the House and the Senate and of three-quarters of the states ) .
15 Nevertheless it is possible to make a number of guarded conclusions on how the social changes that have been described in this chapter have altered the structure of relationships within the rural population .
16 It was no accident that Baldwin VII of Flanders moved to a new repressive interpretation of comital justice at just the same time as he claimed the superior advocacy over all ecclesiastical houses in Flanders .
17 The Polish peasants were at best , he thought , poor , lazy and dirty , exceptionally ignorant , negligent of social obligation and therefore of little use to either the military or industry in any civilised and modern state .
18 The wealth of feminist literature which theorises violence in society seems of little interest to either the police or the popular press .
19 the superiority of direct taxation on both the equity and efficiency scores .
20 At a local level , particular societies identified these interests unambiguously with those of organised labour within both the Labour Party and the trade union movement .
21 The aggregate supply curve and its shape allow the introduction of different views of where the macroeconomy can settle and of the significance of economic policy in general and fiscal policy in particular .
22 The effect of this system on both the official and actual curriculum in schools is examined in later chapters .
23 The right wing coalition parties , RPR and UDF , are expected to triumph at the French legislative elections due to take place at the end of this month but , regardless of who wins , the French economy is set to go into recession in the first half of this year with even the most optimistic forecasters predicting zero growth .
24 But what differentiates the earlier part of this century from either the present or the early nineteenth century is that these problems did not all coalesce into one disturbing image of a threatening , dangerous , and disorderly criminal class .
25 It has now to be adopted by the Council of Ministers to bring automatically into force three days later the Regulation of the Export of Cultural Goods to outside the European Community .
26 Yet the prospects for the people who live in blighted cities are bleak unless as a bare minimum there is a recognition across the political spectrum of the specificity and the extent of racial inequity in both the UK and the USA , a reconsideration of democratic involvement at both the local state and national state levels , and an attempt made to locate urban policy within local economic strategy ; urban policy needs to be conceptually disentangled from regional policy .
27 Anticipating the associated upsurge of interest , J. C. Brandt and R. D. Chapman present a survey of contemporary understanding of both the nature and origin of comets , together with its historical context .
28 In this chapter , when examining the benefits and disadvantages of labour-only sub-contracting to both the builder and subcontractor , it will be apparent that the builder probably receives the greater benefit .
29 The chart itself should be hung on a well-lit , shadow-free wall at a distance of six metres from where the subject stands .
30 On this appeal , we have had the assistance of leading counsel for both the appellant and the Crown .
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