Example sentences of "the [noun pl] [prep] [be] [adj] in " in BNC.

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1 Professor Dudek had envisaged the series coming out in paper covers ( the format that was just becoming the way to the mass market ) ; Leonard ensured that it went into hard ; Dudek had not meant the books to be prestigious in format but vehicles of introduction ; Leonard saw to it that his book could stand alongside the best that there were from both sides of the Atlantic .
2 Much recent research in social cognition has stressed that many apparently complex tasks satisfy all or many of the conditions for being automatic in this sense ( e.g. social categorisation — Higgins , Rholes & Jones , 1977 ; Higgins , 1989 ; causal attribution — Bargh , 1984 ; social interaction — Langer , 1978 ) .
3 Perhaps it may bring with it , too , release from the pressures to be competitive in the scramble for status and material goods and give instead greater ability to value those things which are true and lasting .
4 In a personal address to the Emperor , he declares the Logos to be incarnate in Constantine .
5 Lawyers are concentrating on the civil action as the army 's priority is to recover the money , but Capt Smith added : ‘ We may well need the police to be involved in the very near future . ’
6 We as magistrates do try and be consistent in our sentencing er throughout the country , I think it 's beholden on the police to be consistent in their approach to offenders , as well , and it seems quite wrong that someone in Folkestone gets away with doing something with a guy in Wigan er goes before the court .
7 Of course , studies of police attitudes or talk however racist , do not necessarily show the police to be discriminatory in practice .
8 Other measures which are clearly associated with subjective risk while driving are cognitive load as measured by dual-task performance ( e.g. Harms , 1986 , 1991 ; Hoyos , 1988 ) and verbal ratings of the chances of being involved in a near miss ( Watts & Quimby , 1980 ) .
9 Measures which other researchers have described as corresponding to subjective risk have been changes in heart rate or GSR and subjective estimates of the chances of being involved in a near miss ( Watts & Quimby , 1980 ) .
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