Example sentences of "[adj] [noun] [vb mod] produce [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ It defends some hundreds of jobs and it 's a good example of how European action can produce results .
2 ‘ It defends some hundreds of jobs , and it 's a good example of how European action can produce results .
3 So although a different totality might produce subjects who were neither exploiters nor exploited , such individuals can not be produced within capitalist societies .
4 Repeated dipping will produce films many monolayers thick .
5 Thus Andrew Sutton can comment that conductive education can produce results ‘ which seem quite beyond the expectations of children growing up with cerebral palsy and spina bifida elsewhere ’ .
6 By the time of Fritz and Hitzig 's work it had been known for nearly a century that electrical stimulation of nervous tissue would produce movements .
7 This suggests that careful annealing at the appropriate temperature could produce samples with a high degree of crystallinity .
8 Here at the Department of National Heritage , ministers believe a national lottery will produce cascades of money .
9 You might be tempted to attribute it to lowish wage rates ( at the Brasserie ? ) , but a good answer would produce figures to justify this assertion ( you know both the staffing structure and the total wage bill for 1983 , at least , so you could work out the average gross wage per annum and relate it to what you knew about catering wages for the period ) .
10 A simple mis-keying of a complex formula can produce errors that are hard to spot but which subtly change the balance and so disrupt the model 's accuracy .
11 For instance , environmental events can produce alterations in the brain levels of neurotransmitters , particularly serotonin and norepinephrine ( see Akiskal , 1979 ) .
12 Professional bodies will produce rules of conduct for such activity having regard to advice from an Advisory Committee to be set up by the Lord Chancellor .
13 Slowly growing lesions can produce difficulties in the lung and the gut , causing many problems including shortness of breath , and periods of continuous pain .
14 Defective tiled roofs can produce problems identical to those posed by ageing slate roofs , but because clay plain tiles are necessarily hung on battens ( not every tile is nailed except on very steeply pitched roofs ) and it is not possible simply to apply tiles direct to a boarded surface as in the case of a slate covering , the problem of rotting roofing battens and sarking does not arise in connection with tiling .
15 There were fears that the advent of dual capacity would produce conflicts of interest , and certain technical changes were made to the mechanics of trading .
16 The definition of the PostScript language has always been in the public domain and Adobe always anticipated that other companies would produce versions of it .
17 We can not expect that the experience and experiments of other people in other places occupied with other problems will produce answers off the peg which will fit our particular requirements .
18 High-precision laboratories can produce results with error terms of less than plus/minus 20 years ; they employ very carefully controlled measurement procedures , but they also require samples three to four times the size of those used by normal-precision , conventional laboratories .
19 ‘ The Labour Party must produce policies which convince voters that their own prosperity depends on a government which takes active responsibility to promote a strong economy and that their own security — and that of their families — is best advanced by a government which works for the welfare of the whole community . ’
20 The Minister told me the other week that compulsory competitive tendering can produce savings of 8 per cent .
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