Example sentences of "[adv] of [noun sg] [verb] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Or rather it will be if the health-care proposals come with a price tag that requires the taxpayer to finance an extra $100 billion or so of government spending a year .
2 Cincinnati Bell Inc has had the all clear from Standard & Poor 's Corp , which affirmed Cincinnati Bell Telephone Co 's double-A-minus senior debt rating on its $285m or so of debt following the company 's announcement that it would file for a 9% increase in local services and a three-year alternative regulation plan beginning January 1 1994 .
3 During the final hour or so of cooking put the raisins and currants previously well washed , in a separate oven pot , and with water to cover them , to bake .
4 It did not of course reach the bowl of scummy water , dirty plastic debris and filthy rags and bits of wood on the balcony .
5 The suggestion that the typical science enthusiast was Anglican and not politically radical does not of course affect the wider generalization that Protestant cultures were more amenable to freedom of thought .
6 A change of citizenship did not of course imply a divorce from the old country .
7 The most general account of vegetation so far published is that of Wilmott ( 1945 ) for Uig , but that does not of course use the modern methods for vegetation description .
8 In asserting the common interests of schools , pupils , LEA and parents , Owen does not of course escape the consequences of the inherent tensions and contradictions .
9 This is because the study of poetry as poetry — rather than as historical or cultural material — is a matter of intuitive and affective response , not just of willingness to accept an intellectual discipline , as might be the case with philosophy , economics , and so forth .
10 Variables such as the degree of ‘ distance ’ between state enterprises and central state agencies , the internal coherence of management and unions , the ability to inflict costs on government , and conversely of government to bear the political costs of disruption , will affect the way objectives are transmitted ; as will wider relationships between social classes and the state .
11 And both of course climaxed a return to form by winning their respective championships last season .
12 Sound up of Dino thanking the hospital staff in English
13 Since 1983 , changes in social security regulations have given private-sector providers of residential and nursing-home care the confidence to expand because a subsidy was available for those residents without means or who ran out of money to pay the fees .
14 's and Africans just out of detention attended the sessions together .
15 To check on your players ' health press Q while the game is paused and the ball is out of play to access the menu .
16 And her father , no slouch on the Nordic circuit himself , has agreed to let her take five years out of education to become a champion .
17 Not until they had worked ( this time 2 men one boy ) another three months till August did they come out of debt having an advance of £19 : 0s. : 0d. and having a balance due to them of £14 : 3s. : 5d .
18 Not us not us , every time I speak to somebody about something , you know marketing can do it , y'know everybody 's d giving away free tickets as a way out of y'know compensate the people , re-dressing the situation .
19 As the EMF/Silverfish bandwagon rolls into Sheffield , the awkward prospect of witnessing a ( Silver ) fish out of water seems a distinct possibility .
20 These cams are on the underside of the carriage and are put out of work using a transfer tool .
21 Despite all the hurrahs about Europe from marquandistas in London , the plain economic fact is that Europe has the worst unemployment record in the industrial world , and the construction of Europe with an enduring 10 per cent out of work leaves a permanent 10 per cent unlikely to vote at all , or , if they do vote , to vote racist .
22 Mr Lamont announced five specific initiatives designed to help those out of work re-enter the jobs market , particularly the long-term unemployed .
23 Growing out of childhood involves a great many major changes , so it is not surprising if teenagers seem totally self-absorbed and may sit for hours apparently doing nothing but day-dreaming .
24 Any sign of Men and he was off out of sight using the dead ground between rises to stay hidden , and he was careful to rise when he could over ridges where rocks or trees broke the skyline and so camouflaged his presence .
25 Finish off by tying with the hanging loose end , cut away the surplus , and tuck it up into the collar out of sight to leave a neat and tidy tie .
26 But on the way home , the prospect of a day or so out of sight seemed a prudent thing to consider .
27 Not until the two men were out of sight did the highwayman turn his horse and put it into a gallop along the track that passed near to the hollow where Seb and Melody were kneeling .
28 With two games remaining in Group One Scotland are out of contention to go the United States , but the Swiss look virtually certain to be one of the 24 nations involved in the finals .
29 Mr Checchi , for his part , said yesterday that he does not intend to seek a new partner to replace the $225m shortfall , but will instead repay KLM out of operating profits -a move analysts said would further endebt the airline .
30 Two years later dozens of Green Goddess military fire engines were brought out of storage to cover the firemen 's strike .
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