Example sentences of "[adj] [noun sg] [prep] [pron] [conj] in " in BNC.

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1 Section 11(1) of the 1968 Theft Act provides : … where the public have access to a building in order to view the building or a part of it , or collection or part of a collection housed in it , any person who without lawful authority removes from the building or its grounds the whole or part of any article displayed or kept for display to the public in the building or that part of it or in its grounds shall be guilty of an offence .
2 Ltd. he and his brother were made directors , but there was apparently some friction between them and in 1882 he resigned and set up in practice on his own as a consultant .
3 Some comfort for us though in that the line of inferior division was not north of Luton , but of York ; nothing changes !
4 Being uncomplicated , the riders tend not to take much notice of it and in their minds , they have already finished .
5 Political conflicts normally took the form of struggles between parties or individuals for influence over the ruler , struggles in which the victor secured the all-important privilege of easy access to him and in which the vanquished were dismissed , disgraced or exiled .
6 And when he came into the Pincushion Room and rested his elbows on the window-ledge , he would look out of the window at the garden bright with midsummer sun or bathed in moonlight and think , all this is mine , that garden , that fruit cage within the flint walls , that lake , the Little Wood , as far as I can see on either side of me and in front of the house and behind , all that is mine …
7 Ewood Park is a lucky ground for them and in the first half they went for Blackburn with all guns blazing .
8 This is a characteristic common to everyone and in fact Milton here shows us just how much of himself he puts into his Satan when we recall that he , as a Puritan , contended with his own pride , a fault with which he was most unhappy .
9 Eugénie always held Biarritz in special affection and it was a source of great pleasure to her when in 1880 she managed to recover the furniture from the Villa which she installed in her house in Farnborough .
10 The scheme had an interior logic to it but in order to see it you had to be , let me see , stark raving mad , I suppose .
11 He took a very long time over it and in the end just lipped the hole .
12 It was a hard job to secure that gig for them because in those days — and probably still even now — we are not the trendy band everybody wants to use . ’
13 Workers had rallied enthusiastically to the Soviet , and soldiers in the capital also seemed to have more faith in it than in the Duma leaders .
14 Finally he took the bass part of some airs of Handel … and played the most beautiful melody on it and in such a manner that everyone was amazed .
15 Jane had found that when she rescued a stray , Fluff : he displayed far more confidence in her than in anyone else .
16 The poem expresses a lot more anger in it than in ‘ Futility ’ where you get the impression that Owen has given up .
17 These differences are related to the fact that the female pelvis is specially adapted for childbirth , with the result that there is more accommodation within it than in the male , while the relative depth is less .
18 She had still been smarting from her unjust dismissal for ‘ over-familiarity with the management ’ at Ardis & Co , when she had wasted no time in squashing two men in particular at Vasey 's who had shown more interest in her than in their work .
19 I then pointed out to him that I strongly deprecated a dissolution at this moment as I had implicit confidence in him and in the Conservative Party now in power , and I considered that as most countries in Europe , if not in the world , were in a chaotic and indeed dangerous state , it would be a pity if this country were to be plunged into the turmoil of a General Election on a question of domestic policy which will arouse all the old traditional bitterness of the hard fought battles between Protection and Free Trade : also that it was quite possible that his majority might be reduced , or that he might not get a majority at all .
20 Well liberation theology is one version of it that in certain parts of the world , particularly where there is great economic and political oppression , where people get locked up in prisons for believing and thinking differently , and where there is very real persecution of the poor , and those who erm have different ideas .
21 ‘ You , my boy , have done a wonderful thing for us and in return we wish to do something for you .
22 Obscure as they are , one can be confident that relations with Normandy were an important aspect of Æthelred 's reign : he is known to have made a treaty with Richard I , married his daughter , and gone into exile there in 1013 , and reported to have both sent a military expedition against it and in 1009 asked Duke Richard II for help .
23 Mary 's nobles detested her insolent consort almost as much as she did and , either from genuine loyalty to her or in devious application of their own power politics , conspired to remove him .
24 In Nielson-Jones v Fedden [ 1975 ] Ch 222 it was held that it was not sufficient for the husband and wife to sign a memorandum to the effect that the husband was to have a free hand to sell the property and use the money to buy a new house for himself although in Burgess v Rawnsley [ 1975 ] Ch 429 it was held that a beneficial joint tenancy was severed by the oral agreement of one joint tenant to sell her share in the property to the other even though that agreement was not specifically enforceable .
25 We are having , we , we are at the moment reviewing all our traffic calming er requests because there are a whole load of them and in fact some of them we 've not been able to proceed as quickly as others so we , we need to look at the whole thing
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