Example sentences of "[noun pl] [subord] [pers pn] [be] [vb pp] " in BNC.

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1 This means that in all states where they are evaluated , unc ( say ) is always strictly larger than
2 The French government tried to save money by accrediting the consul-general it sent to Japan in 1858 also as chargé d'affaires ( a device quite often used outside Europe , mainly in minor Latin-American states where it was expected that political relations would be very much subordinate to commercial ones ) .
3 The lucky ones are saved by the Pet Rescue Scheme and subsequently found homes where they are loved and looked after by more caring individuals or families .
4 Neglected children were taken away and locked up in Homes where they were made to eat worms .
5 In Puritan homes in which novels were banned , and in Evangelical homes where they were banned on Sundays , generations of children , often skipping the doctrinal dialogue , have been fascinated and excited to imagine themselves to be Christian and Christiana , never knowing what adventures they will find around the next corner and confident that there will be a happy ending .
6 It has always been so greatly prized in Indian homes where it is served particularly on special occasions and whenever possible .
7 The RR wiper motor is mounted in rubber bushes where it is screwed to the bulkhead .
8 AA rosettes were introduced to highlight hotels and restaurants where it was judged that the food could be specially recommended .
9 The tour included a visit to the SCOTVEC offices where they were given an overview of SCOTVEC 's role and functions .
10 Working with Local Development Organisations , through training and business support schemes and specific projects such as the Flexible Learning Centre in Drumchapel and the Easterhouse Entrepreneurship Programme , GDA has made considerable progress in extending economic opportunities where they are needed most .
11 Clearly assistance is not given to all kin invariably and whatever the circumstances , but are there certain relationships where it is given almost automatically ?
12 Another version of the bronze lion , from the collection of Dr Simon in Berlin , is illustrated in Bode 's 1908 book on Italian Renaissance bronzes where it is considered to be sixteenth-century .
13 Most of the Asian claimants in Cohen and Sadiq 's study were able to buy goods on credit from local Asian shops where they were known ( Sadiq , 1991 ) .
14 The exporter does not expect to get paid for his goods for 12 months so he is given a credit note — a standby letter — from the importer 's bank .
15 The double-sided nature of the sixteen-year-old boy who arrived in the History Eighth at St. Paul 's among a group of conventionally well-educated youths two years his senior — who seemed to him grimly earnest and thinking only of work and success and speaking in more re fined voices than he was used to — is clearly shown by Thomas 's two attempts at writing fiction , The Happy-Go-Lucky Morgans ( 1913 ) dedicated to ‘ My Father and my Mother ’ with its epigraph from Hardy , ‘ But now — O never again ’ , and an unpublished work of ‘ Fiction ’ ( his title ) which he abandoned in the early summer of 1914 .
16 ( In 1940 there were only four entries so it was cancelled ) , but presumably this arrangement was unsatisfactory for in 1952 John Chalcraft bought it from the Club for £15 .
17 The task of household budgeting was an extremely difficult one and evoked harsh words from husbands if it was mismanaged , even though most husbands probably had little notion of how to manage on the sums they gave their wives .
18 The unit can only be used successfully with low level inputs , such as microphones and low output guitar pick-ups if it is preceded by a suitable preamplifier .
19 These pellets may accumulate in great concentrations if they are deposited from regular nest or roost sites ( Southern , 1954 ; Lockie , 1955 ; Dare , 1961 ; Simms , 1961 ; McNally , 1964 ; Dean , 1973 ; Glue , 1971,1977 ; Glue & Hammond , 1974 ) .
20 After emigration , mononuclear phagocytes may remain as immobile tissue macrophages for several months until they are stimulated or activated .
21 The regime thus charged him with damage of government property and jailed him for a few months until he was released under a general amnesty .
22 Indeed , the Camilla tape lay dormant in British newsrooms for months until it was published overseas and widely circulated in Britain .
23 Such lags may be consistent with an absence of arbitrage opportunities if they are caused by traders choosing to exploit information in the futures market , and/or a delay in the response of the calculated index ( stale prices ) .
24 We are not saying that there is anything wrong with timber-frame homes if they are constructed properly .
25 Mr Whitelaw would personally repudiate such demands if they were made again .
26 Three failed to comply with the protocol restrictions ; one patient continued to use H 2 receptor antagonists until she was withdrawn three days after entry and another was unable to keep his alcohol consumption below 40 U/week ; a third ( asymptomatic ) patient withdrew her consent within a month of randomisation .
27 Yanto and Molly followed them with their eyes until they were lost from view among the trees .
28 ‘ Look at me , ’ he said , and she did , slowly opening her eyes until they were fixed on his face .
29 A third party right can not be revoked or modified by the parties if it is established that the right was not intended to be so revocable or modifiable without the third party 's consent .
30 Hunt , a £150,000 signing from Kettering 22 months ago , scored 14 goals until he was dumped into the reserves by Keegan who added : ‘ He has worked hard , he 's knuckled down and he deserves his place . ’
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