Example sentences of "but the [noun] [adv] [verb] in " in BNC.

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1 But the intensity still exists in Schmeichel 's pre-match preparations .
2 But the inspiration finally came in an unlikely form .
3 With the ground getting in terrible condition in the second half , both sides had plenty of chances to score , but the ball either stuck in the mud or the keeper saved .
4 But the animal also lives in an external environment and we have here a fundamental new set of ethical values being developed by the ecologists and ‘ green ’ people .
5 But the issue still remained in the balance for a further twenty years .
6 But the treatment usually consists in trying to help the alienated patient to come to terms with his situation , which means accepting his position in society and the norms of conduct he finds so disturbing .
7 But the Behringer really scores in its hair-splitting precision — if one of those rotaries is even slightly nudged you become all too aware of it — so the unit 's fussiness is as much a blessing as a burden .
8 but the daughter still keeps in touch with her .
9 But the problem then lies in Marx and Engels ' implication that there is an epistemological alternative in materialism or science .
10 IT is easy to see the word fan as a simple shortening of fanatic , but the origin actually lies in the old name for the followers of any sport .
11 This did the trick , of course , but the birds simply moved in next door , which did n't make the neighbours too happy .
12 But the scream only comes in a series of small , desperate gasps : ‘ Oh God , no no no .
13 His fingers bit deep into her shoulders , but the pain scarcely registered in comparison with the sensations that possessed her , the fire streaking through her whole nervous system .
14 The US is once again a case in point , but the situation also arises in the majority of the decolonised third-world states .
15 The Supreme Council , consisting of heads of state of member governments , met four times during 1989-90 , but the organization effectively disintegrated in the aftermath of Iraq 's invasion and annexation of Kuwait in August 1990 [ see pp. 37631-41 ] .
16 But the devastation already wrought in it is heartrending to contemplate .
17 Appalled , she pushed back , but the movement only succeeded in pressing her lower body more closely to fitzAlan 's hard thighs .
18 It is still the case that the economy is determinant ‘ in the last instance ’ , but the economy never functions in isolation from the other instances .
19 With slip stitch ( or skip stitch as Brother call it ) the needle selected to slip does n't move at all during knitting , but the yarn just passes in front of it .
20 It would mean moving to a less salubrious area , of course , but the answer clearly lay in her renting accommodation which was much cheaper .
21 But the trees still echoed in her ears .
22 But the arm now ended in a bloodied stump .
23 In most of the windows the curtains were partly drawn so that the rooms must have been dark , but the people probably lived in the back .
24 Some of their burrows in low-lying places may at times become very wet but the rabbits usually stay in residence , apparently by no means inconvenienced .
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