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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Once again the Party was preparing for armed struggle and the stunning German victory of 1940 would have appeared to many Vietnamese to be ‘ the moment of great opportunity ’ .
2 After Johnson was jailed for 5 and a half years for armed robbery and the escape attempt , the Home Office said that a full inquiry had been carried out and they were satisfied there was no negligence by staff at Bullingdon Prison .
3 The obsessive compulsive neuroses such as obsessive washing and the various phobias will require medical assessment but may receive particular help from Emotions Anonymous , which also covers a whole range of other emotional disorders that may be significantly disturbing to the life of the sufferer and be beyond personal control .
4 That would certainly suit the Jaguar management 's book and has less potential for political embarrassment than an unruly hostile bid .
5 The Education Committee evaluated Village school for possible closure because the teacher had reached the age of retirement .
6 Here we look more closely at some of the building blocks in the creation of the sex beast or , more accurately , the way that suitable building material is being shaped for possible use if an opportunity occurs .
7 He said : ’ The purpose of the rule is clear : It is the circuit breaker between monetary union and the back-door creation of a United States of Europe' , where a centralised government takes control over domestic public expenditure as the price of a bail-out .
8 But as in last week 's debate in the House of Lords concern was expressed about retrospective legislation and the practical difficulties of prosecuting alleged war criminals .
9 Anyway — no second replay , no discussion about that goal or the ‘ penalty ’ .
10 'E knows more about that place than the guv'nor 'imself , ’ he asserted .
11 The number of symptoms was computed for each subject and the groups were compared for the proportion having 1 and 2 symptoms .
12 In the female nude the painted surface and the body become ciphers for each other and every stroke and layer of impasto may be read for traces of desire .
13 Of course lamb and fine burgundy were born for each other and the Chateau Grancey 1982 was memorable .
14 Non-belief in God also means there is no way of shirking collective responsibility for each other and the planet .
15 Jacques Delors and his mates should note there are only two things which unite Europe hatred for each other and the influence of America .
16 There are separate oil pressure gauges for each engine and a battery of rectangular instruments giving the usual Ts and Ps .
17 Mail messages are accumulated for each user and the number of currently stored messages is shown in the display page header .
18 Mail messages are accumulated for each user and the number of currently held messages is shown at the top of each display page .
19 The talks focussed on the strengths and weaknesses , the opportunities and the threats for each brand and the state of the business in the major markets , as well as explaining the structure of the new marketing organisation .
20 IBM claims that the Power/4 implements a unique parallel processing architecture , with memory bottlenecks reduced by the use of local memory for each processor in addition to shared system memory , eliminating the need for continuous updating of the cache for each processor unless the data is actually shared .
21 access another user 's files except with the expressed approval of the owner for each occasion unless the files have been established for such access ;
22 Levels of lighting should be assessed for each child and a good contrast of print on paper provided .
23 The stakes are placed on the board , one for each honour and the game , two for ‘ Matrimony ’ ( King and Queen of trumps ) , two for ‘ Intrigue ’ ( Queen and Knave ) , and six for ‘ Pope Joan ’ ( the nine of diamonds ) .
24 As a guide to these priorities , a summary of the comments made about each type was prepared in matrix-format , showing also the main information category for each sub-system and the importance of each sub-system in relation to the primary role of the EPH Fig 11.14 ) .
25 Equally , there may be a separate policy for each individual or a master policy , covering everyone in the scheme .
26 In other words , there is either no opening and closing working capital for each year or the two balances for each year are the same .
27 This increase in value is the equivalent of the return or interest that could , for example , be expected on a bank deposit for each day that the relevant sum of money is on deposit .
28 They determine the subjects for each day and the deployment of speakers .
29 They receive a retainer fee of £1,300 , £10 for each turnout and an hourly rate of pay .
30 The aim is to identify the formal published entry requirements for a sample of faculties/courses , covering both general entry requirements for each institution and the faculty requirements .
  Next page