Example sentences of "[adj] [noun sg] [adv] [prep] [det] " in BNC.
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1 | Moreover , as we shall see when we discuss collaborative teaching later in this chapter , it is much easier for two teachers than three or more to undertake the shared planning on which the success of classroom collaboration depends . |
2 | Whilst we believe in our biologically-determined nature , there will be no possible utopia apart from these two : a matriarchy run by morally superior women , where desire is excluded , and where our innate niceness means that we can all live happily ever after ; or , we let the chaos out , and we rule fiercely and savagely for a short-lived reign , our ferocious and insatiable desire destroying everything around us . |
3 | There is nothing wrong with that — in fact , without such precautions it would be hard to get a coherent programme together at all . |
4 | Mr Davison said : ‘ We are aware that they are taking a fairly careful look again at all the information . |
5 | As the matter spirals into the black hole , it would make the black hole rotate in the same direction , causing it to develop a magnetic field rather like that of the earth . |
6 | This is because regular heroin use is likely to result in both physical addiction and a major psychological dependence , and these consequences would keep prevalence at a high level long after any drop in the level of social deprivation . |
7 | Yet he or she is usually limited by lack of resources , lack of accommodation , lack of contact outside the institution and downright sexual repressiveness within from any sexual expression whatever . |
8 | Certainly they impute to the accused a degree of mystical malevolence just like that implied in witchcraft charges . |
9 | The contrasts which can be drawn with foreign industry even with such a tradition-bound country as France — are often stark . |
10 | While this hypothesis was systematically studied in the USA , British research specifically into this area was negligible . |
11 | Notwithstanding the possible ground for distinguishing between the two cases , therefore , there remains a fundamental doubt as to just how much policy innovation can reasonably be expected from the British judiciary especially in such a politically sensitive area as defence policy . |
12 | What is of particular interest is that direct investment overseas by such enterprises has become increasingly important over the post war years ( as opposed to portfolio investment , of which British capital has a long tradition ) , and that this phenomenon is especially important for the British economy . |
13 | • time-of-day tariff perhaps with several different charge bands applying to different times of day . |
14 | In fact there is a direct continuation inland for several miles of the algal mat that can be seen forming on the beach at the present day . |
15 | That sort of experience binds boy and rod together , and I used my old greenheart happily for many years to come ; but in time , the top section broke , then the middle section , and eventually , I had the rod redesigned . |
16 | I 've worked for German Intelligence twice in this war . |
17 | It was Jack Cohen , founder of Tesco , who invented the ‘ Pile it high , sell it cheap ’ philosophy that changed British shopping dramatically in less than a decade . |
18 | And in the Commons in 1860 he declared : " I have never uttered a word in favour of universal franchise either in this House or elsewhere . " |
19 | In addition , even though a fifth of total income is derived from occupational pensions , the vast majority of pensioners rely on social security either for all or for a significant proportion of their income : two-thirds of them receive 80 per cent or more of their income from this source . |
20 | At such points we can observe the spectrum of the unstable product together with that of any stable products , carrier materials and so on . |
21 | ‘ Indeed , yes , ’ agreed Dotty , breaking a digestive biscuit carefully in half . |
22 | Zips : a strong two-way zip runs very freely — a series of pleated stitching close to each side of the zip preventing any loose fabric catching . |
23 | The Metropolitan has a different station here from that used by the District and Piccadilly Lines . |
24 | The suit she was wearing was the colour and texture of sacking , a foreign-looking suit somehow with those buttoned pockets , but the ticket collector was willing to bet it had n't cost a penny less than forty guineas . |
25 | Some of them are on N two , that erm , not necessarily , in fact the majority of the forms in the supporting guidelines on manuals are not versioned yet but they , we followed the advice of Roy there and we have listed them in each of the guidelines with a statement of erm , we 've just , I mean , a clear listing there of each form and when we actually go to introduce the next time , reprint , we will then put version codes on them . |
26 | In each text , the first two sentences set up a context that makes a different one of these two structures more plausible by allowing fully referential success only for that one structure . |
27 | There is a clear message here for all potential rabbiters and sportsmen . |
28 | Apply waterproof adhesive liberally to both surfaces , then nail the new piece in place . |
29 | If the pattern in Hungary ( for which country data based on vital statistics in 1967 are available ) is a common one , it would appear that , in the more developed countries , at least , maternal age and birth spacing also influence fetal viability independently of each other ( Table 16 ) . |
30 | His subsequent celebrity propelled the ‘ Beatle Bass ’ to commercial success far beyond that of its originator , Gibson 's EB-1 . |