Example sentences of "of [noun] of [noun] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 From the clerical aristocracy , he had been a leading Anglican theologian as Lady Mary Professor of Divinity at Cambridge before his appointment to the prominent public position of Dean of St Pauls in 1911 .
2 The main impediments to the free flow of people are those placed there to facilitate the free flow of motorised traffic , particularly road crossing barriers , signs embedded in the pavement and steps and ramps to carry the walker over or under the roadway. little seems to have been done in the way of formal schemes of assessment of pedestrian problems or of priorities for maintenance or design .
3 But the pervasive and insidious presence throughout the novel of manifestations of Quechua culture suggests the ability of that culture not only to survive in an alien environment , but also , as it itself is modified , to exercise an ‘ Indianizing ’ influence on the country as a whole .
4 The Department of Transport should ‘ take immediate steps to speed up the rate of progress of road maintenance research , ’ the MPs said .
5 Official summation of progress of air campaign
6 Thus , prices are compared as a ratio of values of base quantities .
7 Plots of I o versus V o for sets of values of V i or I i are known appropriately as output characteristics .
8 Correspondingly , graphs of I i versus V i for sets of values of V o or I o are described as input characteristics .
9 Alright , and that , that 's where most of differentiation of food products erm , has emanated from , it 's not changing the food product itself , right , because it 's very difficult to do that , but it 's the combination of food products and marketing services that erm , characterizes the differentiation .
10 Erm so you 're going to get a lot of kind of landlord tenant type problems .
11 Failure of Antarctic sanctuary plan A French proposal for the establishment of an Antarctic whale sanctuary was withdrawn when it became clear that it would not win the requisite 75 per cent level of support of IWC members .
12 There was no significant correlation between rates of change of bone density at the two sites , or between the rates of change and the initial bone density either in the radius or spine .
13 Some preliminary quantitative insights can be obtained by writing the rate of change of hydrogen peroxide with respect to time as : Here k f is the second-order rate coefficient for recombination of HO 2 radicals ( 6.7x10 -12 cm 3 per molecule s -1 at 287K ) and k l is the first-order rate coefficient for physical removal .
14 Thirdly there have been studies of geomorphological processes affected by human activity and particularly important stimuli were produced by Wolman ( 1967a ) who suggested the way in which sediment yield varied at the present time between urban and non-urban areas and extended this to provide a model of change of sediment yield in the northeast of the USA since 1700 , and also by Douglas ( 1969 ) .
15 The general form of the model employs the rate of change of prices ( ΔP ) , the rate of change of wages ( ΔW ) , the level and/or rate of change of unemployment ( U or ΔU ) , together with the ( lagged ) level of union density ( D&subt-1 ; ) as determinants of the proportional rate of change of union membership ( ΔT ) , i.e. with the anticipated positive ( + ) and negative ( - ) influences shown in brackets .
16 Even if there is no change in the level of the PSBR , the rate of change of money growth will be affected by the way in which government finance is raised .
17 These problems assume major proportions when allowance is made for the possible dependence of the level and rate of change of money wages on the level of aggregate demand .
18 There appeared to be a determinate , stable , inverse relationship between the rate of change of money wages and the unemployment rate which had continued to hold good for almost a century .
19 The annual rate of change of money wages , , is measured along the vertical axis and the unemployment rate , U , expressed as a percentage of the total workforce , is measured along the horizontal axis .
20 The non-linear relationship has two asymptotes : ( a ) as the unemployment rate falls towards 0.8% , the rate of change of money wages tends to infinity ; ( b ) as the unemployment rate rises towards 100% , the rate of change of money wages tends to a lower bound of — 1.0% .
21 The non-linear relationship has two asymptotes : ( a ) as the unemployment rate falls towards 0.8% , the rate of change of money wages tends to infinity ; ( b ) as the unemployment rate rises towards 100% , the rate of change of money wages tends to a lower bound of — 1.0% .
22 The rate of change of money wages is measured along the vertical axis and the excess demand variable , , is measured along the horizontal axis .
23 If all of the remaining ( n - 1 ) markets respond in a manner similar to the one outlined above , aggregation across labour markets will yield a determinate relationship between the overall rate of change of money wages , , and an index of aggregate excess demand for labour , X L , where defined as the ratio .
24 Thus Lipsey 's postulated relationship between the rate of change of money wages and excess demand in the labour market not only possessed appealing microeconomic credentials , it also seemed to accord with much of what Keynes had written on the subject of inflation .
25 Phillips and Lipsey had measured the rate of change of money wages along the ordinate instead of the expected rate of change of real wages .
26 Phillips analysed the relationship between the annual rate of change of money wage rates ( or the rate of wage inflation ) and the annual average unemployment percentage , using data for the UK from 1861 to 1957 .
27 This trade-off was based on the original observations by Professor A. W. Phillips of the relationship between the rate of change of money wage rates and unemployment levels over long periods of time going back as far as 1861 .
28 Now in general suppose the rate of change of volume dV/dt during this process is proportional to the difference in volume .
29 The rate of change of flux linkages with rotor Position is shown in Fig. 4.14(b) , which has the correct phase relationship to Fig. 4.14(a) .
30 For a given phase current the torque produced by one phase is proportional to the rate of change of flux linkages with rotor position ( Fitzgerald and Kingsley , 1952 ) and therefore the static torque/rotor position characteristics for positive excitation of the two phases can be deduced , as in Fig. 4.14(c) .
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