Example sentences of "[noun] of [noun sg] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 I write to say how appalled I was at the bad manners of BAIE members at the Editing for Industry awards dinner in Torquay .
2 He revealed ‘ encouraging ’ figures on arrests and ejections of home supporters in the aftermath of Boro 's final home league game this week .
3 Britons are advised not to use Libyan internal flights because sanctions against export of aviation parts to the country make planes unsafe and uninsurable .
4 In the last decade , collectors have also become associated with the illicit export of art objects from the country .
5 The meeting revealed wide differences , especially between the United States and West Germany , on the issue of the export of machine tools to eastern Europe .
6 And while the British Government was turning a blind eye to the export of machine tools from Matrix Churchill , Dr Al-Habobi was happy to report his success to Saddam Hussein .
7 The negligible export of cotton goods in 1770 was transformed into half of all British exports between 1800 and 1850 .
8 The move follows several waste dumping scandals , in particular the illegal export of hospital waste to France and chemical waste to Romania .
9 The export of motor cars in the past nine months is 90 per cent .
10 La Rochelle , for example , established by a pariage agreement between Duke William X of Aquitaine and Louis VI of France in 1130 , grew in the second half of the century into the chief port for the export of Gascon wines to England ; the prospect of employment attracted immigrants , the settlement became a substantial town .
11 Both the scale of his operations and the degree of his specialization in financial business made him a unique figure in early Stuart England , though he did have a few other economic irons in the fire : among them , a share in the tobacco monopoly and the export of iron ordnance in the 1620s and huge purchases of East India Company pepper in 1623 and 1628 .
12 Advances in medical knowledge might lead to the conclusion that some are simply too dangerous : there has long been a debate about the status of boxing , with increasing knowledge of the risks of brain damage to boxers .
13 AN INDEPENDENT inquiry must be set up by the government to examine the risks of brain injury in boxing , doctors ' leaders said today .
14 The need to ensure that the new all-regular Army lived in conditions that would not deter recruiting became more pressing than consideration of the risks of capital expenditure on accommodation in areas where reasonable security of tenure was not assured .
15 Such oils may help to lower the risks of heart disease by reducing the stickiness of blood that can lead to a heart attack .
16 Using social classes I and II combined as the reference point , Table III sets out the relative risks of child mortality for different social groups in three age bands : 1–4 , 5–9 , and 10–15 years .
17 Relative risks of child mortality in social classes I and II in comparison to classes IV and V suggests a progressive shallowing from 2.08 at ages 1–4 to 1.37 at ages 10–15 .
18 Can I ask therefore why the Eastern Arts of appraisal report of nineteen eighty-six a major appraisal costing a huge amount of Eastern Arts money was not considered and and presented across .
19 But what is new is MPMG 's success in introducing the tactics of management consultancy to the world of the arts .
20 The purity language of outrage , like the militant tactics of suffragette politics with which it was linked , continued to provide women with a powerful weapon to challenge men .
21 A good example of this is provided by the tactics of Treasury officials in the preparation of the 1947 autumn budget [ Rollings , 1985 ] .
22 In combination with the alkaline lysis method for preparation of bacterial lysates , this constitutes a rapid and effective method for the isolation of plasmid DNA for sequencing and other purooses .
23 They are fortunate that , for the most part , the increasing personal contact at work , the continuing isolation of farm workers from other occupational groups and the increasing proportion of workers living in tied housing out on the farms are providing opportunities for this identification to be retained , should farmers choose to cultivate it .
24 More recently software has been produced which combines the characteristics of viewdata screens with the sort of search capability usually found on databases .
25 The previous programme provided ECU 0.342 million over three years to the School of Conservation of the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen to develop a standard test to evaluate the stability characteristics of metal objects from archaeological sites .
26 Guerrilla warfare shared many of the characteristics of resistance movements in the Second World War .
27 To describe the frequency and characteristics of asthma attacks in the United Kingdom and to compare actual management with recommended guidelines for the management of attacks .
28 This paper reports the main findings from the first national audit of asthma attacks ( 1991–2 ) , which had two aims — to describe the characteristics of asthma attacks in the community , and to compare current management with recommended guidelines .
29 Having now examined the objectives and formal structural characteristics of trade unions in market-type economies , it is also necessary to consider their more informal organisation at workplace level since , in many Western European countries during the post-World War II period , there has been a notable growth of bargaining at plant level — often outside official union channels — along with a progressive enlargement of its scope ( see Chapter 4 ) .
30 B R McLeod , A Liboff Dynamic characteristics of membrane ions in multifield configurations of low frequency electro-magnetic radiation Bioelectromagnetics 7 : 177 — 189 ( 1986 )
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