Example sentences of "[noun] [vb -s] [adv] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 If British Rail goes ahead with the building of this station at a cost of £1.4 billion , what sort of income will it need to secure from the capital developments to service the loan , bearing in mind the fact that the Minister has often said that the Government will put no money into the project ?
2 The lower jaw fits snugly into the groove when the jaws are shut , like the blade of a penknife fitting into its handle .
3 The lady Alianor refers always to the new king thus , thought Joan .
4 However , this Government have frozen , deliberately , purchase grants even in the past three years when the Minister has had funds at his disposal .
5 The increasingly accepted argument in Israel today is that Eretz Israel in any case belongs primarily to the Jews and that all the Palestinian Arabs , refugee or otherwise , have a lesser claim upon it .
6 From this , a lane goes forward to the last habitation , Dorusduain , with a parking space midway .
7 The 14 night Sovereign Wildlife Safari drives far across the Kenyan plains , visiting the huge game reserves at Samburu and Maasai Mara .
8 The Mandera refugee camp sits just inside the Kenyan border with Somalia .
9 If the disk is preserved A. abyssorum differs further in the naked ventral interradial area and in the coarser scaling of the disk .
10 Boler 's case grinds wearily to the Court of Appeal .
11 Dr Richard Neilman of the Nazelden Foundation in Minneapolis identifies the following eight characteristics : The sufferer thinks frequently of the next opportunity for use or may make specific resolutions not to use .
12 The reason for the change points again to the essential dilemma trade unionism faced .
13 Again , that money goes directly into the farmers ' pockets .
14 Similarly , the Scandinavian antipathy for power-hungry , dominant task leaders in groups fits poorly with the German tolerance of dominant power-holders as a means of getting things done .
15 It 's a long walk to Meall Corranaich and just before the top , the ridge splits away to the west which causes some confusion in poor visibility .
16 The last sentence refers particularly to the development of the notion of ‘ economic duress ’ as creating liabilities for trade unions .
17 James Allan flies economically with the air-minded Kiwis .
18 Our faith turns away from the search for personal security , which we all instinctively seek when we feel threatened , and leads us to abandon ourselves to God alone .
19 Preston and London East are already there ( CONGRATULATIONS ! ) and I know you have all been working hard to ensure the National Assessment goes well at the end of November .
20 The route turns away from the Ffos-y-Mynach at Waun Lodi where the path is boggy and dangerous .
21 After 200yds , at a cross roads , the route turns left onto the farm road through Holly Farm .
22 Either way , the change sits there for the reader , fascinating , not to be ignored .
23 A couple of years of university so familiarises us with this idea that literature dissolves entirely into the drudgery of reading and writing crit .
24 I remember saying that there were dangerous days ahead which would call for faithfulness and courage , quoting the text from the Psalms : ‘ He will not be afraid of any evil tidings , for his heart standeth fast in the Lord . ’
25 Ian cares passionately about the Church .
26 A description of the course penned in 1892 holds true : ‘ Like many of the best links , the Aberdovey course lies partly among the sand-hills and partly on the low ground just inside .
27 An open copy of Nell McAfferty lies helplessly in the doorway .
28 Although her poetry often speaks of ill health and many times looks forward to the poet 's early death , she died of measles , a sudden illness which she was too weak to withstand .
29 The value of winter green manures lies partly in the covering they provide to the soil during the wet months of the year .
30 It is important to notice that the contrast lies primarily in the function of language which Halliday calls IDEATIONAL that is , the way in which language conveys and organizes the cognitive realities of experience , roughly corresponding to what we have earlier called " sense " : [ 12 ] The bushes twitched again .
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