Example sentences of "[adj] [prep] [noun] in the " in BNC.
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1 | Then there 's a live Metheny Group album in the can , which is due for release in the summer of ‘ 93 , and I 've just done another album with a really interesting young sax player called Gary Thomas . |
2 | The band are currently working on their new LP due for release in the Autumn , backed up by a major UK tour . |
3 | At the Bohorok rehabilitation centre , orangs due for release in the forest must first learn which wild foods are good to eat . |
4 | AD/Cycle is due for release in the second quarter 1994 . |
5 | The package , allowing data sharing throughout the enterprise , is due for release in the second quarter of 1993 . |
6 | ICL will start distributing trial packages bundled with DRS/NX V7 in June — with full implementations embedded with DRS/NX V8 due for release in the first quarter next year . |
7 | ‘ Close to Eden is the latest offering from Hollywood veteran Sidney Lumet [ Serpico , Muder on the Orient Express ] and is due for release in the West End on June 11 . |
8 | This superb musical partnership , which began less than a year ago , is now firmly established — indeed Kieran and Frances have just completed their first album which is due for release in the New Year . |
9 | Mrs Gaskell , who knew much better than Jane Austen how the poor really lived , and saw that her readers knew it too by taking them inside ( at least in towns ) , nevertheless allows her heroine , Margaret , to take pleasure in sketching the exterior of a squatter cottage which is due for demolition in the New Forest . |
10 | The £24 million project is due for completion in the summer . |
11 | The centre , due for completion in the spring of next year , will comprise shop units , a licensed restaurant , a pottery , day care facilities for the elderly , office space and a 400 seater auditorium where concerts , drama and other cultural events can be staged . |
12 | It may be that the cost of living and paying rent locally is prohibitive , or that the hospital is due for closure in the foreseeable future . |
13 | ‘ This is cost-effective for authorities in the long-term and stops children in care drifting into lock-up establishments ’ . |
14 | Pablo Riveroll of Baring Securities in Mexico City says the investment could be hugely profitable for Televisa in the long term , but notes that it will bring the firm no net profit until 1996 . |
15 | Of course it is right for people in the north-east to think of themselves as north-easterners . |
16 | I have been depressed about life in the Eighties , the way the economy has gone in the last twelve years . |
17 | While the war continued , and until early 1945 continued on French soil , the General 's main concerns remained to secure the authority of his state , to maximize the French military contribution in the war against Germany , and to ensure as large a role as possible for France in the formulation of the peace settlement . |
18 | An individual 's diet may vary for many reasons and while starvation is unusual in the Western world because of the availability of food , it is still possible for people in the West to suffer from inadequate nutrition . |
19 | ( It is more specific about arrangements in the Metropolitan Police District ) . |
20 | This effect causes the pickup coil pulses associated with entry to saturation to be noise and undesirable for use in the final measurement system . |
21 | She lied to Dr Wyn , saying that she had wrenched her shoulder , since although there was nothing inherently shameful about noises in the head she did not wish to confide in him . |
22 | Appendices , which set out on separate numbered pages any detailed material , unsuitable for inclusion in the body of your report . |
23 | As elsewhere in Peru , this whole hillside has been ploughed by hand : the animal-drawn plough was unknown in Inca times and is still unsuitable for use in the Andes . |
24 | I know this is quite usual for fathers in the Eighties , but in the Fifties when we had our older children , and the Sixties when Shanti came , it was not quite so common . |
25 | ‘ And it 's quite usual for people in the Services to get married on the station . |
26 | the costs of Labour for professionals in the capital |
27 | What 's so different about workers in the U K to difference of workers in Germany , France , Spain , Portugal and Greece ? |
28 | Just as a doctor may decide to switch off a life support machine because the patient is in effect dead , so care workers could ‘ switch off ’ the services on which the old person is totally dependent for care in the community , thus making admission to an institution inevitable . |
29 | The sound puzzled him : it was wrong for boys in the presence of Mrs Crumwallis . |
30 | Surkov said , rising , ‘ I must be fresh for Maggie in the morning . ’ |