Example sentences of "[noun] [noun] [adv] seems to be " in BNC.
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1 | The Central Statistical Office said the figures showed ‘ the underlying level of non-oil import volume may now be flat whilst non-oil export growth still seems to be rising strongly ’ . |
2 | The location of rift systems also seems to be closely related to the distribution of ancient structures representing zones of weakness between stable cratons . |
3 | The existence of other endothelin receptors also seems to be increasingly likely ; indeed , it may well be difficult to imagine that the actions of three different peptides are mediated by just two receptors . |
4 | Although attitudes are changing , the V6 engine configuration still seems to be the one ideally suited to the needs of a big executive car like the Safrane . |
5 | The most likely formation path therefore seems to be collision of an old neutron star with a main-sequence star 10Myr ago , leading to catastrophic mass transfer to the neutron star and considerable loss of matter from the system . |
6 | ‘ Even if the business manager increasingly seems to be as important a factor these days in the acquisition of art as the dealer such as ourselves ? ’ |
7 | The rest of the United Kingdom now seems to be beginning to move out of recession ; is it not true that Northern Ireland is about to move deeper into it ? |
8 | The current education debate also seems to be pushing for a return to traditional teaching methods . |
9 | The clinical usefulness of the polymerase chain reaction thus seems to be limited only by the power of our imagination in identifying specific targets . |
10 | Frame Technology also seems to be rapidly building on its growing acceptance with Next , Hewlett-Packard and Hell-Xenotron all adopting it as an OEM product . |
11 | Ligand binding to the EGF receptor therefore seems to be integrally associated with liver cell proliferation . |
12 | Blackbird Leys now seems to be succeeding in the struggle to improve its image , and later in the programme Nick Clark talks to the people who live there . |
13 | Whereas the consequences of tight inventory control seem to be accepted by the British consumer — the Marks & Spencer supermarket nearest our London office always seems to be out of chicken by mid-afternoon — it runs contrary to the habits of a typical American shopper , particularly one visiting a store that charges top dollar . |