Example sentences of "[noun] [vb base] [adv] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 Let's have a defence review so both the military and the industries are prepared for change when it comes . ’
2 The repressor molecules bind very stably to an ‘ operator ’ region of the chromosome ( O ) , and block the synthesis of messenger RNA from the genes G 1 , G 2 , and G 3 .
3 You tend to find that groups , if you 've got a group who 're gon na launch a bomb y'know that that groups make far more risky or dicy de decisions than individuals .
4 Since the rates of State benefits and income from various types of investments change so frequently , there is little point in quoting figures , but it will be important for you to know how to gather the up-to-date , accurate information .
5 Witchcraft and sorcery , which in any case few other cultures distinguish as sharply as the Zande , are not the only mystical responses to the experience of affliction in tense relationships .
6 Peak winter numbers normally occur between December and February , and birds disperse very rapidly in late February and March .
7 Again , the law of the supermarket reveals that the rules of criminal law and of contract interrelate very closely .
8 If the institutions remain so determinedly uninvolved , those who seek radical solutions will have to look elsewhere , possibly to an independent regulator who would appoint auditors and fix their remuneration .
9 Signed to a major label , The Wedding Present sit rather awkwardly on the edge of acceptance into mainstream pop .
10 Past reputation , either in the same school or elsewhere , matters because it is slow to change and because laymen 's views change equally slowly .
11 David O Selznick no longer owned a part of him .
12 Any consideration of the knowledge and skills debate almost inevitably leads to attempts to clarify the nature of the social work task itself ( Gordon and Schutz , 1977 ; Gross et al . ,
13 Funny how goalposts shift so fast .
14 ‘ As the cockle-gatherers of Penclawdd , the seaside village a few miles from the Eisteddfod field realise only too well , the ebb never leaves empty-handed it leaves behind traces of new life .
15 He has pointed out that platelet aggregates grow very rapidly and , although platelet adhesion to collagen is almost instantaneous , there is a lag period ( several seconds ) before aggregation proceeds ( Wilner et al , 1969 ) .
16 ‘ The Three Holy Kings — March ’ strides out a first with gallant confidence , but very soon the left hand accompaniments grow even more daring and complex in harmony .
17 In non-profit organizations , particularly in Type B , the stewardship accounts provide much more limited measures of performance .
18 It is noteworthy that only London Authorities appear as most deprived by these criteria .
19 Our education programme changes attitudes slowly in an environment where selfish values grow even faster .
20 And then I was dozing a bit and while we were watching like Arachnophobia we were we were still in bed but about four hours sleep just about .
21 These birds clamber all over and under their hosts , devouring whatever bloodsucking ticks and flies they find .
22 Controlling activities arc so closely linked to Planning and Decision-making activities that it would be advisable to study the next two chapters in conjunction with Chapters 16 and 17 .
23 She carried her haul up the hill to the cottage where she found the kitchen empty once again , although she could hear people talking in the living room .
24 Brown and McCormick 's skuas and Wilson 's petrels fly as far as temperate latitudes of the northern hemisphere .
25 How these claims and dependencies are reconciled , how the views of the different disciplines fit consistently together to give a total picture of the one world of experience is a problem both vast and baffling .
26 Searches are not made as frequently as staff would like , because they say , shortages mean there simply are n't enough officers to do it .
27 Does C's ownership of F make C more valuable ?
28 One common source of distrust of hermeneutics in social science is that the idea of ‘ meaning ’ is so various and elusive , as the first few pages of this chapter make all too plain .
29 Again LEA inspectors suffer more acutely in this respect , perhaps because of their lack of corporate identity — each LEA 's inspectors or advisers are rather isolated from those of other LEAs .
30 Culturally and linguistically , Britain offers a nexus of increasingly plural possibilities , a promising ground for a postmodernism which may in the future develop more strongly in Britain than it has hitherto .
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