Example sentences of "[adv] [be] [verb] the [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | By not addressing these issues school management would be failing to seize the opportunity of LMS and would merely be extending the previous resource practice into the new era . |
2 | For example , the modern female hostage who falls in love with her captor may not merely be manifesting the well-known defence of ‘ identification with the aggressor ’ ( particularly since it is not so much identification with him as submission to him ) , she may instead be giving way to her phylogenetic id and its demand that a female captured by a male should look to him for sexual satisfaction . |
3 | The sentence can only be assigned the right truth conditions , or alternatively be given the correct semantic representation , if the pragmatic significance of and in this sentential context ( namely the " and then " interpretation ) is taken into account before doing the semantics . |
4 | We 're saying that by 1995 , all UK beaches will only be reaching the bare EC legal standard in order to avoid being prosecuted . |
5 | I also consider ( though this may only be expressing the same conclusion in another way ) that , for the reasons given by Mr. Langley , the injunction as at present framed should be interpreted as not prohibiting compliance with the section 39 notice . |
6 | ‘ I do n't think so , thank you , and of course I shall only be staying the one night , ’ she said very firmly . |
7 | On a miles per scream basis , there are lots of competent cars at a fraction of the Bentley 's price that could go that distance before getting too strident , and a Mercedes S-class would still only be whispering the odd complaint after 1200 miles . |
8 | However , it is inefficient from a user 's point of view to leave course assessment to suppliers ( who will not necessarily be assessing the same thing as users ) , and inappropriate to expect individual users to be able to evaluate courses within any framework other than their own needs . |
9 | The answer to the last of the three questions should perhaps be put the other way round . |
10 | Middlesbrough-based Cleveland Business Development Agency will shortly be running the latest in its series of evening Business Planning courses . |
11 | THE man who sold us the Barbie doll may soon be promoting the scandal-rocked Royal Family . |
12 | Fr Morrow said he would soon be lodging the same application at Keighley County Court in Mr Bland 's home town . |
13 | If all goes well , you 'll soon be driving the new Saab Carlsson CD into the company car park . |
14 | When he reached the age of 19 and married Mary of Gueldres in Holyrood abbey , James could no longer be denied the full authority of kingship . |
15 | The British citizen must no longer be denied the fair voting systems enjoyed by the citizens of every other European country . |
16 | These celebratory fanfares do n't sound as though they might just be heralding the very advent of Slavonic culture . |
17 | For in a day or two days you 'd just be returning the weary road for the funeral mass . ’ |
18 | A prime minister might generally be considered the best candidate , but not if he has been dubbed ‘ the butcher of Beijing ’ . |
19 | Nevertheless , observers on what might broadly be called the left were generally very much opposed to the creation of enterprise zones ( Anderson , 1980 ; Massey , 1982 ) . |
20 | The argument was put before the Court that since all the Member States were already parties to the 1950 Convention , there could be no need for action by the Community under Article 235 , since all the Member States would , by definition , already be applying the same rules . |
21 | Here 's me who should already be starting the Great Southern and Western in Dublin , and the chief away . |
22 | The bulk of the textile manufacturers in northern France at the same period were similarly children of what could already be considered the middle strata ; the bulk of the mid-nineteenth-century Nottingham hosiery manufacturers had similar origins , two-thirds of them actually coming from the hosiery trade . |
23 | The reader will already be sensing the close relationship between play and story-making ( ‘ storying ’ ) , and between play and reading stories and poems . |
24 | ‘ And in spite of doubts , ’ the abbot reminded them wryly , ‘ should not we still be thinking the same ? |
25 | After time , he will still be facing the same problem : what to do with the remainder of the material ? |
26 | And nearly half a century later , when The Cantos would tail off ( not discreditably ) in ‘ Drafts and Fragments ’ , Pound would still be purveying the same message , in terms of ‘ the gardens of Proserpine ’ , the mineral and metallic gardens that Proserpine according to the myth created in the underworld , to duplicate as ‘ art ’ the springing herbage that she inspired in spring and summer through her six months in the overworld . |
27 | You do not need to send your releases to everyone who might be interested if this is likely to delay getting them into the post ; that can always be done the next morning . |
28 | It was one of Chapman 's rules that even when the ball was on the other side of the field , a player must always be anticipating the next move . |
29 | His work in Peking has now been published in book form , and will hopefully be given the critical accolades it so undoubtedly deserves , but that will be small consolation for a man who may never seen his homeland again . |
30 | HAVING finished second to France , and thereby won what the footballers used to call the Home International championship , Scotland can hardly be grudged the eight players they have in the British Isles task force for the invasion of New Zealand this summer under captain Gavin Hastings . |