Example sentences of "of [noun sg] [pron] [verb] [pers pn] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Also , say the physicists , the nature of physics itself makes it difficult to compartmentalise .
2 We share His life through the water of baptism which washes us clean and brings new growth into our lives .
3 great And of course her doing it all with her usual
4 Of course I remember them eighties and nineties here .
5 The sun on our backs and bright crystals biting into our feet , the printed pain of a sharp finger edge cutting across the joyful soft warmth of the wind ; the loving immediacy of experience which hurls us free from the containment of assessment , order and code .
6 As almost 90% of papillas in FAP patients show visible enlargement or deformity suggestive of dysplasia we consider it ethical and clinically desirable to continue such histological assessment .
7 The other major concern for women is about finding ways of living which give us more independence , more control over our own lives , and more self worth than is frequently the experience of women in subordination to men .
8 I made a lot of mistakes as any young person does , but I never made the mistake of thinking I knew it all as far as the Africans were concerned . "
9 For around £5 each , DIY shops sell locks to fit any kind of window which makes them impossible to open without the right key .
10 So are the means of transport which make it possible .
11 And , if one accepts the concept that the spirit is journeying through many lifetimes in order to achieve that degree of evolution which makes it unnecessary to spend further time on this earth , then surely it must be essential to experience life both as a man and as a woman .
12 You may be the kind of person who finds it easier to have sex than to talk about it , whether with new or regular partners .
13 It 's frustrated , urgent and fluent — plus it 's got that feeling of abandon which makes it unpredictable and on edge all the time .
14 It is from some of these 400 that the letters come protesting innocence — and if they often ramble and are poorly expressed , that is indicative of a lack of education which made them vulnerable to manipulation in the first place .
15 That answer , at least , is consistent with the passage in Questions of Procedure which makes it clear that the internal arrangement of Cabinet business is no concern of Parliament or public .
16 Under the quiet but firm leadership of Kenneth McDougall , ably seconded by Mark Frame , the BDDA was approaching the stage of development which made it fit for its task in the post-war world .
17 ‘ I was only aiming for the British record , ’ Wooderson declared in a state of shock which caused him sleepless nights for a week .
18 The Finn touched the ball inside to Jess who controlled it and turned in a blur of movement which took him clear of his cover and a sweetly struck shot hummed past Andy Rhodes .
19 He read through his first paragraph — after years of novel-writing he found it easier to put it all in the third person .
20 ‘ It is very good for old people and sufferers of arthritis who find it difficult to dry themselves with a towel , ’ says Chris .
21 Their work was hampered when a large boulder blocking their way was moved , resulting in a further fall of shale which took them several hours to remove .
22 Whether or not the act is criminal is immaterial , since it is the explicitness of depiction which renders it obscene .
23 It contains six small apples and has the sort of handle which makes it easy to carry to school or on outings .
24 He lacked spark from the start and never hit the kind of form which won him this title in the same ring last October .
25 We can accept the less than perfect aspects of a friend — it 's their lack of perfection which makes them endearing , because it lets us have a fault or two ourselves .
26 Out of curiosity he pushed it open .
27 The importance of the law in such matters is in creating a centre of power which makes it possible to enforce moral duties .
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