Example sentences of "[am/are] [vb pp] [adv] to [art] [noun pl] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Many of the industries are placed close to the docks ; they are port oriented .
2 A securitisation will qualify for a linked presentation even though the seller retains significant risk on the underlying mortgages ( even with little potential upside ) , provided ( among other things ) that claims against the seller are limited solely to the assets securitised .
3 On the other hand , I do believe that English speaking referees who are exposed exclusively to the opinions of a mischievous English press are likely to be adversely influenced .
4 Then , suddenly , the arms are dropped down to the sides of the body again .
5 The sympathetic nerves achieve their effects by releasing the hormone noradrenaline from the nerve-tips , which are located close to the organs that they influence .
6 The residuals are smoothed using the same recipe as before , and the results are added back to the results of the first smooth ; this is illustrated in exercise 9.1 .
7 These are related specifically to the personnel involved in ward teaching and the methods by which the teaching is undertaken .
8 In some roofs tiles are hung on to the battens with only every third row nailed .
9 The front panel carries the switches , and the timing resistors are soldered directly to the tags of the rotary switch S2 as shown in Fig. 3 .
10 When Dr Solomon is happy that he 's got your ailment sussed , you 're whisked off to the diseases database .
11 er There 's a young girl in Didcot itself er her parents are known socially to the blokes at the fire brigade ; she , she suffers from cerebral palsy , she 's eight years old , and until recently she 's been going out on bike rides with her father on a child seat , but as you know kids grow up , they grow out of things , therefore she ca n't do it any more .
12 The IT and CTT policies are policies of indemnity and are settled up to the limits of each policy section less applicable excesses .
13 2 A habitual collocation of two or more words whose combined meaning is not deducible from a knowledge of its component parts and of their grammatical relations to each other : He 's a real pain in the neck , and I 'm fed up to the teeth with the mess he 's landed us in .
14 Nutrients from the sap are passed on to the ants in the mealybugs ' excrement .
15 The Provisionals replied by appointing a ‘ security officer ’ to each brigade to inspect buildings to be bombed for compensation and to arrange with the owners that the security arrangements be brought up to the standards specified in the government regulations .
  Next page