Example sentences of "in what be [adv] a " in BNC.
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1 | Beck , unbeaten in the Ryder Cup with 3½ points out of four , is the sole American survivor in what is clearly a non-vintage field for this year 's championship . |
2 | I do not propose to get involved in what is clearly a diversionary tack . |
3 | The LTA is operating in what is today a very professional tennis world , yet on all the LTA 's innumerable committees , there is hardly a single person who has had personal experience of playing top class international tennis at the highest level since the game went ‘ Open ’ in 1968 . |
4 | The evidence for the intensive use of sorghum and millets some 8,000 years ago indicates that such use first occurred much earlier than previously thought , and took place in what is today a rainless desert . |
5 | A pre-tax profit of nearly $42m for the quarter represents an improvement of almost $71m in what is traditionally a difficult winter quarter . |
6 | Constantly rising profits in what is generally a depressed area , suggest here is a latter day John Moores with a magic formula for success , based on doing the simple things properly . |
7 | Nor do I believe that anything is to be gained by analysing the reported cases in what is presently a contentious area of the law . |
8 | The respected Philips producer/engineer Volker Straus was in charge and I wonder if the combination of the acknowledged problems of the Berlin Philharmonic hall , and the fact that Laser Disc and VHS video versions are to be released shortly , led to this untypical spotlighting in what is otherwise a most impressive recording . |
9 | Once again , we can recognize a certain truth in what is otherwise a misleading conception of style . |
10 | ‘ This is one of the most exciting things available in what is otherwise a very bleak field . ’ |
11 | Richard Parker Landscapes Colour Around Us , The Art Gallery , Queensway , Billingham ( until June 27 ) IN what is effectively a full-scale retrospective with work that goes back to 1958 , Richard Parker shares with us his great love of landscape . |
12 | On Monday September 13 John Burkes play Mickey Doherty 's in what is definitely a competition game . |
13 | The subject seems to be posed in what is basically a three-quarter view from the back , with the breast and the inner part of the thigh visible between the arm and leg , but the far leg and arm have been pulled around into the picture plane so that the spectator has the impression of seeing a simple back view , abnormally splayed out , as well . |
14 | Here both buttocks and the far side of the back are visible in what is basically a simple three-quarter view of the figure ; one leg is in strict profile , while the other is seen almost from a frontal position . |
15 | These comfortably compensated for the famine of new ideas in what is truly a diffusion line . |
16 | So dependence on the mother leads the child actively to believe in what is essentially a dishonesty on her part . |
17 | Systems which reward nurses individually can actually increase competition in what is essentially a cooperative work environment and that can be damaging to efficiency . |
18 | The ‘ electors ’ , usually prominent citizens , then vote according to the public mandate in what is essentially a rubber stamping process . |
19 | If business growth is to be achieved , in what is essentially a depressed market , it is vital that we build our market share while aggressively pursuing the opportunities offered by new product developments . |
20 | Derbies , wherever they are played , have a habit of being won by the team which best combines finesse with physical power in what is always a hostile environment . |
21 | before a final all-embracing italicized section , looking back in its typography , placing , and , most importantly , its rhythm , recalls the opening nursery rhyme chorus , but gives it a universal voice which seems to include all that we have heard before in what is now a ritual chant ending with an appropriately childlike sound , |
22 | The milieu in which I met James in 1975 was that of the florid young Lord Alexander Hesketh , undoubtedly the last figure of unbridled fun ever to have competed in what is now a grimmish , strictly money-oriented sport . |
23 | What I am suggesting is that you should not underrate your ability to succeed in what is now a highly competitive market place . |
24 | The Unix Forum ‘ 92 expo and conference is being held May 26–27 at the Internationales Congress Centrum Berlin in what is now a united Germany . |
25 | The Unix Forum ‘ 92 expo and conference is being held May 26–27 at the Internationales Congress Centrum Berlin in what is now a united Germany . |
26 | Indeed , the SVR4.1 ES work cleared out much of CPU-specific code that had crept into SVR4.0 , resulting in what is now a clean porting environment , according to Price . |
27 | And Malone wants a drastic improvement in what is now a preparation game for next Friday 's Irish Cup semi-final with Cliftonville . |
28 | ‘ This area , Miss Williams , might encompass a few square miles of countryside , but it will also take in what is now a very unsightly rubbish tip . |
29 | Her lips come together in what is more a grimace than a smile . |
30 | The Mother of Us All shows more continuity , but again much depends upon production in what is still a largely non-narrative opera . |