Example sentences of "[adv] new [noun sg] of [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 A second approach Bush mentioned was that he would meet the 150 or so new House of Representatives members before they become captives of the leadership or the lobbyists .
2 He was also involved in the development of Bailey 's Irish Cream , which created an entirely new category of drinks , cream liqueurs .
3 In the event , the crossing of the very new with the very old has produced an entirely new race of roses that combine the softer colour and fragrance charms of the old with the advantages of the modern forms .
4 All was linked to the sense of a new departure , a " new style " , a " new regime in politics " and a new team at the helm : as well as a new leader , the party had by the middle of 1912 a new Chief Whip , Party Chairman , party treasurer , principal agent , press adviser , and an almost entirely new team of Whips and organizers .
5 Three benefits have been replaced by an entirely new set of conditions and considerations : supplementary benefit has been replaced by income support ; family income supplement by family credit ; and single payment by the social fund .
6 The 16 North Atlantic Treaty Organization ( NATO ) and seven Warsaw Pact countries took part in an entirely new set of negotiations during 1989 , the Conventional Forces in Europe ( CFE ) talks in Vienna , Austria , aimed at reducing the conventional force levels deployed by each side in Europe ( for decision to inaugurate CFE-first referred to as Conventional Stability Talks-see p. 36413 ) .
7 Once the product hits the real world it has to cope with users who are not so well behaved or gentle — hence the totally new crop of errors .
8 This is a relatively new state of affairs which has resulted from the changes noted above .
9 Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors are a relatively new class of antidepressants that have been heavily promoted for use as first line treatment in depression .
10 Communication of data via computerised and electronic means is a relatively new mode of communications but one which in the space of about thirty years has revolutionised the way in which we use , store and transmit information and data .
11 Taking a longer-term perspective it is also apparent that , during the post-war period from 1946 to the early 1960s , political , social , and economic changes combined to create a particular , historically new set of experiences and definitions of old age .
12 You 've unearthed a completely new range of possibilities in your character . ’
13 From the first , our meteorite collecting programmes have been motivated not for the sake of numbers alone but by the hope that large quantities of fragments would include samples of rare or completely new type of meteorites .
14 Back in the Met Office , for me it meant a completely new set of faces .
15 As will be shown , in this period the community of feeling , aspiration , and practice , as well as the conditions for the reproduction of the discipline , involved the negotiation of a completely new set of pressures .
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