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

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1 Look for the hooded sweater in a startling colour .
2 Mr Johnston said it would be foolish to anticipate better advertising volumes for the provincial press in general , at least until the latter part of 1993 , but the group 's present lower cost base should certainly benefit profits if Britain was eventually to see the type of modest recovery which was beginning to boost the US newspaper industry .
3 Well Bobby we look forward to welcoming you to Oxford erm not only next week for the press launch but for the actual day in April .
4 Although normally kept shut , there is an escape hatch for the after cabin in each of the cockpit seats .
5 The background screen for the African transparencies in ‘ The Dawn of Man ’ was 40 x 90 feet ( 12 x 27m ) .
6 The catalogues which accompany these events have rather different characters , for although there are entries for the exhibited works in each sort of catalogue , and usually an introduction , historical catalogues often have additional essays .
7 ‘ … there can be no doubt that the general economic background for the chemical industry in 1992 is less than buoyant ’ , said Freeman .
8 However , deputies ordered elections to be held for the Supreme Soviet in March 1994 , a year early .
9 An unpublished report prepared for the Supreme Soviet in 1990 by a commission of independent experts states that 437,000 people have been affected by a series of accidents and contamination at the nuclear weapons production plant at Kyshtym in the southern Urals over the past 45 years .
10 I am aware it is some time since we spoke regarding Beeslack but I have been awaiting a response from , Senior Education Maintenance Officer concerning the tree planting proposed for the rough area in the corner of the playing field .
11 For the educated mother in particular , it took a great deal of courage to reject a system of upbringing which combined quasi-religious appeals to ‘ duty ’ and ‘ rightness ’ and ‘ goodness ’ with a claim to be based on the rational attitudes which she herself , as a ‘ modern ’ woman , was supposed to have embraced .
12 It would be truer to say that the regime which enters the war is usually discredited at the war 's end , probably because of its supposed lack of adequate provision for the armed forces in the final pre-war years .
13 For the Edwardian Conservatives in particular , and British Conservatism in general , similar attention has been desirable for some time .
14 In particular , he suggests that the educational system has a marked effect on the production and reproduction of scientific knowledge , and criticizes it for the ahistorical way in which it teaches scientific problems , theories , experiments and proofs .
15 For the middle classes in particular , everyday life and human association is increasingly dedicated to Veblenesque display .
16 For the chinless chap in his chalk-stripe blue suit , strolling to wherever he performs the daily ritual of being ‘ something in the City ’ , or the geezer negotiating the early morning traffic in from Romford in his late model Ford and Italian sweatshirt , their individual style says clearly : I am here and this is where I want to be , you can tell exactly what and where that is from looking at me .
17 While Jim Wells was in Castlewellan for the banned parade in June 1985 , he preferred to negotiate with the RUC rather than be arrested like Foster and Graham or , like Smyth , lie down in front of a Landrover .
18 They could not afford to buy a horse , and although the richer peasants were more heavily taxed , this did not compensate for the wide difference in equipment , which was not taxed .
19 It is a re-analysis of the reasons for the industrial revolution in Britain .
20 An agreement between two or more competing manufacturers whose combined market share exceeds 20 per cent of the market for the appropriate products in the EC or a substantial part of it would not however be exempted under the 1985 block exemption ( though it might benefit from an individual exemption ) .
21 The system determines how many groups are active at the appropriate level for the appropriate table in the Working-Set to which the entries are being transferred , and allocates entries on a roughly equal basis .
22 His mates had all scored and he inexplicably had n't , in spite of the money he 'd blown on all those lime-green cocktails for the bleached slag in the dress with all the red spangles .
23 And the cost of admission for the better seats in the house — £30 and £23 .
24 This is the reason for the internal head-band in helmets which looks as if it was put in in order to provide ventilation .
25 It 's here that Impey , in his book , sees a particular role for the internal auditor in acting as tutor and guide to all line managers in assessing their own systems and controls , and identifying areas for improvement , as part of their annual operational review .
26 I repeat my view , which is shared by my constituents , that a squalid and cowardly decision was announced last week , spelling out the fact that there is one law for those with a voice in the Tory party and another for the ordinary individual in the urban and rural communities of Wales and England .
27 Is it possible for the ordinary man in the street to become confident and competent in handling a computer system , whether it be in his office or in his home ?
28 Richard Taylor , who runs Haden Mac Lellan 's automated manufacturing systems division , left for the Far East in mid-April in good spirits , believing the recession had bottomed out .
29 ‘ So I found myself heading for the Far East in the Service Corps . ’
30 He became a close friend of Sheila Rowbotham , the feminist historian who , together with feminist economist Hilary Wainwright and Big Flamer Lynne Segal , wrote a book which was of enormous importance for the far left in the early 1980s — Beyond the Fragments .
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