Example sentences of "[adj] [verb] [prep] [adj] [det] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 It is interesting to look in some more detail at what some of these factors were .
2 I confirm that the Committee is free to look into all those matters .
3 Each year time and money is wasted by the exorbitant amount of telephoning required to gather in all this information .
4 He confirmed that the RAF were on standby to join in any such operation and that talks between Britain the US and the United Nations would take place on the issue .
5 Something which is liked by the first person you show it to is likely to appeal to many more people .
6 How are you likely to react to all that mopping and sloshing down ?
7 Well smokers all clear or not I do n't know but th that even mentioned in that book Downham Reach and that talk about the Priory Farm where was cos that was all walking about all these smugglers at that time but the book I , the history I thought about do n't seem the same in the book now .
8 And how , as the continents and oceans shift and slide , so too are creaturely minds and instincts automatically adapted , for they are all linked to that same sea of shifting Mind .
9 It 's all crowded with all these trolleys and I keep bumping into them .
10 Menem on Oct. 18 extended to three more Army officers and seven former guerrillas the pardon granted on Oct. 7 [ see pp. 36972-73 ] .
11 ‘ We have an option to stage races here in 1992 and '93 and I am hopeful we will be able to continue in both these years . ’
12 We want an independent inspectorate that is able to comment on all those matters .
13 To assess the damages it is necessary to form a view upon three matters each of which is in greater or lesser degree one of speculation : ( 1 ) the value of the material benefits for his dependants which the deceased would have provided out of his earnings for each year in the future during which he would have provided for them had he not been killed : ( 2 ) the value of any material benefits which the dependants will be able to obtain in each such year from sources ( other than insurance ) which would not have been available to them had the deceased lived but which will become available to them as a result of his death : ( 3 ) the amount of the capital sum which , with prudent management , will produce annual amounts equal to the difference between ( 1 ) and ( 2 ) ( that is " the dependency " ) for each of the years during which the deceased would have provided material benefits for the dependants had he not been killed .
14 Well it 's got some different meanings that and you may be able to talk about that another time with your teacher .
15 So what I thought was that it was quite important to look at all these organisations that do seem to me really to have nothing to do with Oxford or Oxfordshire , and that we should be very careful .
16 Viewers will be able to select from many more channels — additional satellites will be joining Sky 's four channels plus the expansion to the domestic system .
17 We have made submissions to the Commission with our views on proposed life assurance and pensions directives and we have had successful meetings with representatives of the Commission on the issued raised in both these areas .
18 All those with an interest in the Flying Flea , and who would be able to contribute to any such undertaking are asked to contact :
19 Frankly , it had amazed him that she had been able to ride at all that afternoon , given how wasted she was the previous night , but then she was quite a determined little thing .
20 A solicitor will be able to advise on all these matters .
21 We thought we had something more to offer in all those areas than the existing houses , and also more to offer our staff .
22 Be that as it may , since that first witticism concerning the gypsies , I have not been able to think of other such witticisms quickly enough .
23 On April 20 the armed forces claimed to have found a deserted LTTE concentration camp near Mullaittivu , and that the rebels routinely tortured those held in five such camps housing over 6,000 prisoners .
24 ( The author would certainly be pleased to hear from any such greatgrandfather ! )
25 Diane Maidment would be pleased to hear from any former staff members with an amusing , unusual or interesting tale to tell about their stay at the Branch .
26 First performed in 1946 this series of concerts ran for 37 years , earning an entry in the Guinness Book of Records .
27 But customers were no longer quite as wide-eyed as they had been when first faced by all this merchandise .
28 Of course an offer to withdraw was unacceptable accompanied by all those conditions .
29 In all cases in which natural selection has favoured genes for manipulation , it is legitimate to speak of those same genes as having ( extended phenotypic ) effects on the body of the manipulated organism .
30 A third followed after two more days , when Sergeant Joe visited Mr Singleton in his shop in Charing Cross Road and produced two letters ostensibly written by the Duke of Wellington on the eve of Waterloo .
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