Example sentences of "[prep] [art] [noun] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 A salvage operation was under way for the £6 million chopper .
2 ‘ Different , ’ she gave as a verdict , keen not to appear girlishly bowled over by all these unusual tastes , opting for the shrimp special with deep-fried vegetables , and eyeing Guy Sterne 's dark face with calm determination .
3 Children … are not endued with Reason at all , till they have attained the use of speech but are called Reasonable Creatures for the possibility apparent of having the use of Reason in time to come .
4 The effect of the wage differential may be seen from the general equilibrium equations set out in Lecture 6 , modified for the possibility that .
5 For the present all we need do is point to the logical gap between pluralism and neutrality .
6 We shall see below how different schools have been involved in one or more of these types of situation , but for the present two illustrations should suffice to demonstrate the potential of this classification .
7 For the present these views are likely to prevail despite Layfield 's conclusion that LIT was ‘ feasible ’ ( Layfield 1976:207 ) .
8 Ignoring for the present some of the difficulties inherent in functional analysis , we may note , for example , that the account of socialization ignores the variety of other agencies that play an important part in socializing the child .
9 Examples of this phenomenon will be discussed later with respect to monarchical attitudes , but for the present some general words of explication are necessary .
10 It 's becoming fashionable to buy in rather than build specialised servers — IBM Corp and Digital Equipment Corp are both doing it , and now ICL Plc has gone to Burlington , Massachusetts-based Xylogics Inc for the Annex Three and Micro Annex XL communications servers under an OEM agreement that will see the UK company marketing them as the DRS local network terminal server line with its DRS 6000 range of Sparc-based and DRS 3000 iAPX-86-based Unix systems .
11 This study found evidence for the S&P500 and the NYSE Composite index futures that volume is ‘ caused ’ by volatility , that arbitrage opportunities are ‘ caused ’ by volatility , and that volatility is ‘ caused ’ by volume for the NYSE Composite but not the S&P500 .
12 This would obviously be a nightmare for the directors concerned — and their families .
13 The influential Rafael Rodriguez ( who at first refused government positions , but gave advice on economic matters ) believed that Cuba could not rely on the Western capitalist countries ( accustomed to regarding Cuba as their sugar-bowl ) for the assistance necessary to develop an industrial economy .
14 It is certainly working for the BBC Junior Library Services , and there must be other areas which could benefit from a combined approach .
15 Tickets are on sale for the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra and Ivory and Brass concerts at the Town Hall ( ) .
16 George Orwell wrote for the BBC Overseas Service and made hundreds of radio broadcasts , but no recording of his voice seems to have survived anywhere .
17 Still , I had an overseas news radio set and sometimes at dusk when I turned it on for the BBC overseas news , the light on its dial welcomed me like a beacon from home .
18 ‘ Though I may say that I shall be getting twenty-five guineas next Thursday for doing nothing but sit around in a television studio for half-an-hour , instead of beating my brains out all week-end to write a script for the BBC Overseas Service and getting ten guineas for it . ’
19 What might well have fixed it was a radio play , In Parenthesis , by David Jones , produced for the BBC Third Programme by Douglas Cleverdon in 9948 .
20 It was all too much for the FT-SE 100 index , which closed 15.3 points adrift at 2832.50 .
21 Overall , audit fees for the FT-SE 100 grew by only 1.3% in 1991 — compared with a 2% growth rate in 1990 and 11% in 1989 .
22 Using daily data for the FT-SE 100 for the period from June 1984 to June 1988 , Yadav and Pope ( 1990 ) examined proportionate mispricings , that is , the mispricing divided by the current spot price .
23 Pope and Yadav ( 1992 ) used hourly data for the FT-SE 100 from 1986 to 1988 to investigate the speed with which a mispricing is reversed .
24 Yadav and Pope ( 1992b ) used hourly data for the FT-SE 100 index from 1986 to 1990 to examine whether there was a connection in the UK between index returns and mispricings .
25 However , using hourly data for the FT-SE 100 from 1986 to 1990 , Yadav and Pope ( 1992b ) found a positive relationship between mispricings and spot volatility ( measured using the implied volatility from FT-SE 100 option prices ) .
26 For the FT-SE 100 , arbitrageurs can not guarantee they will be able to trade the shares in the index at the delivery price .
27 Table 6.2 shows calculations of the basis using the data from the numerical example in Table 2.4 of Chapter 2 for the FT-SE 100 index future for the 5 and 6 September 1989 .
28 Abhyankar ( 1992 ) analysed hourly returns and innovations in returns ( the residuals from fitting an AR(2) model to returns ) for the FT-SE 100 from April 1986 to March 1990 .
29 Finally , Abhyankar ( 1992 ) considered hourly returns and innovations in returns for the FT-SE 100 between April 1986 and March 1990 .
30 The data from the CFTC ( 1991 ) indicates that in the USA only about 1% of the open positions in index futures are spreads , while the corresponding figure for the FT-SE 100 is probably lower .
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