Example sentences of "[vb infin] in [pron] [art] " in BNC.

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1 When you sort out your notes , Sergeant , you might include in them the additional information that my car was parked at the other end of Boundary Drive , the end furthest away from Glenfair Road , see ?
2 In the case of an unregistered title you will of course make a full land charges search , and you can include in it the name of any buyer-borrower .
3 I do not recognise in what the hon. Member for Leicester , East said about my hon. Friend any vestige of truth .
4 He seems thrilled to stumble across the notion that war has a technological impetus of its own ; others will recognise in it the familiar railway-timetable explanation of why the first world war proved so unstoppably disastrous .
5 New moralists argued that contemporary society denied women ‘ those varied love-makings from the other sex ’ , which would arouse in them a desire to fill life ‘ with a space of joy and delight ’ .
6 The oldest and most worn-out woodcut , representing King Pippin , Two Shoes , or the grim Soldan , sitting with three staring blots for his eyes and mouth , his sceptre in one hand , and his five fingers raised and spread in admiration at the feats of the Gallant London Apprentice , can not excite in me a feeling of ingratitude .
7 If he held his hand over a flowering plant , he could sense in himself the healing properties of that flower .
8 Ruskin would surely have been surprised if he had been told that a time would come when railway stations , like lakes and mountains , would become a part of the imaginative life of men , and when the sounding express engine no less than the sounding cataract would rouse in them a noble delight .
9 Yet a consciousness can occur in which the focal attentiveness on a theme is absent ; in a deeply relaxed mood one simply gazes upon the world .
10 Counter-cultures may and do emerge and establish themselves ; ‘ legitimation crises ’ may occur in which the prevailing cultural norms lose their persuasive force and political domination is endangered ( Habermas , 1976 ) .
11 Fictional stressing of deep connections between primitive and developed man , as well as the connections between primitive ritual and modern dramatic and religious practice stressed by Cornford , Harrison , Frazer , and the others encouraged Eliot to interpret the Rivers book in a way which let him see in it a reflection of his personal crisis .
12 If you look at , say , American TV wrestling , you can already see in it a strutting prediction of the showbiz-sports of the future , where drug-enhanced body-sculpture plays a part both in the athletic demands of the spectacle and in the personality-selling which is its true purpose .
13 Although the juxtaposition of short story and source material would provide in itself a useful basis for an informal discussion of composition and technique , the proposed extension to the activity undertaken here involves participants developing their own story based on the newspaper account .
14 It is difficult , I think , with the experience of such societies in mind , to attribute a theoretical sense to the idea that a type of society will emerge in which the state and politics no longer exist .
15 My wish for you is that in your travels you will discover in yourself a truer meaning of life , and will one day return to us enriched and mature from your experiences .
16 A situation would arise in which the very order which is the objective of law would have to be violated in order to achieve that objective , and this is unacceptable since international law is not an end in itself , but an instrument to be justified largely by its contribution to the limitation of violence .
17 I think that a case might arise in which the reputation of a local authority might be damaged , so as to impair its function for the public good , in which no private individual was defamed ; and in which the public interest would be served by the taking of proceedings for libel by the local authority in order to determine the falsity of the charge .
18 It may not in all cases be sufficient to advise a client that the action which he desires to take is not possible under the existing law ; circumstances may arise in which the proper answer is that if the law does not allow the action to be taken then the law itself should be changed .
19 Thus , the situation should not arise in which the writer of an option contract can not fulfil his obligations by buying securities in the stock market , or that an investor can not buy shares in order to sell them to the option writer .
20 For other types of relationship do exist in which the parties may desire the system of rights and duties which flow from the legal concept of marriage , while — and this is a critical point — the common law is singularly lacking in alternative forms of institutionalized and legitimate union .
21 ( As far as modern women are concerned , an analogous situation must exist in which the demands of civilization — principally incest-avoidance and respect for the paternal authority — represent a recent and indeed onerous imposition on an earlier instinctual nexus which knew nothing of this , indeed which perhaps was the foundation of that submissiveness to male aggressiveness which still seems to underlie the female sexual constitution .
22 I really I really do wish it was that simple and I wish that when I pick up The Star on a Thursday or one of the other local papers that I did n't read in it the twenty cars that 's broken into and and all the other problems and I say to myself now why did that happen .
23 Do n't we have in him a formalist , in fact an aesthete ?
24 A feud would often develop in which the uniformed officer was ‘ taunted from a safe distance with nicknames and insults such as ‘ beetlecrusher ’ , ‘ narker ’ , or ‘ copper-copper wax-ass ’ In turn , the police officer came to view all kids as trouble — to be chased .
25 If we look at the state of our imaginative literature , we must observe in it a grossness , even an indecency of conception , and an inflowing tide of slang and vulgarity and other forms of ugliness which tend to corrupt imagination and barbarize language .
26 Jesus is therefore not simply the human instrument of God 's purposes , nor simply a man responding to divine grace : he is God come as man in order to work out and establish in himself the true destiny of man in friendship and communion with God .
27 When the cards were , from the er , the workshop would come in which the lads had done their work , I mean , one of them , I know dear old Pete , in particular , he 'd write for crome , C R double O M , because that 's how he 'd say it .
28 Sometimes I would put in what the weather was like , if there was a storm or something unusual .
29 But if we do , we should also discern in them the origins of the teamwork and collaboration that we have brought to an unparalleled peak of complexity and that has brought us some of our greatest achievements .
30 ROS : Madam , it so fell out that certain players We o'erraught on the way : of these we told him And there did seem in him a kind of joy To hear of it .
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