Example sentences of "[adj] range of [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Established in 1949 , has an interesting range of members across all industries and sectors , ranging alphabetically from AEA Technology and Anglian Water plc , via banks , chemical and construction companies and so on through many a blue chip national or multinational through to universities such as Cork , Birmingham , Edinburgh , Stirling and Napier ( also in Edinburgh ) .
2 I think that themes are a good idea in terms of promotion ; they draw attention to the breadth of art represented by the top range of dealers at Grosvenor House .
3 First , we review the regional and social range of realizations of /Ε/.; ions
4 Another way of attracting more customers — apart from providing a better day-to-day service — would be to offer a higher , or different range of benefits on top of the national insurance benefits .
5 My view is that it will be necessary to establish four or five Passenger Transport Boards to be responsible for Transport but that these should have a different range of powers from that of the Strathclyde PTA .
6 This material abundance gives the modern historian a quite different range of experience from that of his classical or medieval colleagues .
7 God might have annexed colour sensations to the kind of light reaching our eyes in ; quite different way from that which he has done , so that the very same things ( in their real nature ) which are red to us might have been blue , and vice versa , or we might have experienced , quite different range of colours in the same physical situations .
8 In Britain today we have different criminal laws and hence a different range of crime from those which once existed .
9 Substantial research has shown that different ethnic groups ( e.g. children of Caribbean or Asian origin ) display different ranges of attainment in the British education system .
10 Government research says that the presence of dioxins in flue gases from plants such as that at Pontypool ‘ are in the low range of parts per trillion ’ ( one part per trillion is of the order of 30 seconds in a million years , or one ounce in 28 million tons ) , and that all the UK PCB-destroying plants together emit only a ‘ few grammes per year ’ .
11 However , if hydrostatic theory is then used to calculate the possible range of values of the polar moment of inertia C from the axial spin period T a and the allowed values up to the upper limit of either f or J 2 , the calculated range of values of C is so wide that no useful constraints on the variation of density with depth are obtained .
12 What appears to be of more significance for the role of keiretsu in Japan 's economic growth is their objective of diversifying their interests in the widest possible range of activities throughout manufacturing industry , construction , finance and the service sector .
13 It is most important to include the widest possible range of matters to be considered when deciding whether or not a given house is below acceptable standards .
14 The object of the exercise as presented in such channels of communication is not how to get the most nutritious meals prepared in the shortest possible time but rather how to go beyond the usual range of meals with time-consuming inventiveness and culinary skill .
15 Located in Bilston in the Black Country , Perry Poultry buys oven-ready poultry , which it processes for a prestigious range of customers including Marks & Spencer , Sainsbury 's and Kentucky Fried Chicken ( Perry makes Zingers , Kentucky 's new line of spiced burgers ) .
16 It sets out a comprehensive and coherent range of services for supporting the families of ‘ children in need ’ including ( for the first time ) children with disabilities , children in hospital and even those in independent boarding schools .
17 Best-known for its coloured jeans and tops , Soviet has come up with a strong range of jackets for the autumn including reflective styles , zip-off sleeves and rubberised cotton and nylon bombers .
18 If one were to peruse the extensive range of surveys of the applications of the rational expectations hypothesis to macroeconomics , one would come across a different framework of analysis , one which is so widely accepted that it is rarely explained in any detail , still less is its theoretical basis probed critically or its conclusions called into question .
19 Your expertise will be rewarded not only by a competitive salary , but also by an extensive range of benefits including 5 weeks ' holiday , pension and profit share schemes , a subsidised restaurant and first-class sports and social facilities .
20 Woven in 80% Wool and 20% Nylon Axminster , it forms part of the Prelude Collection , an extensive range of designs for hotel , leisure and the brewery market , available from stock .
21 The Club is based in Chambers Street and offers an extensive range of facilities including restaurants , bars , squash and snooker ; membership also entitles you to take advantage of the very competitive rates for both accommodation and private functions .
22 It was , of course , a very expensive operation but one which achieved the introduction of a complete range of products into the kitchens of those people whose sampling of the product would be the most valuable .
23 Thatched cottages cluster round the harbour while at the other end of the wide sandy beach Somerwest World offers a complete range of entertainment to holidaymakers and day visitors .
24 ( It was not possible to cover the complete range of topics in the Cockcroft foundation list during the project . )
25 Perhaps the most successful maker is Peugeot , with a complete range of cars from the small 205 — around £3,000 for a 90,000-mile 1985 car — to the legendary 504 estate , about £2,000 for a 1982 example .
26 Frightened off by such high figures , many collectors renounce the attempt to assemble a complete range of bindings over the centuries and , sensibly , turn to more limited fields ; for example , to books stamped with the coats of arms or crests of early owners in gilt or ‘ blind ’ ( without gold or colour ) .
27 It is a cause of women 's relatively low pay and limits women 's chances by the narrow range of occupations to which they tend to be confined .
28 Nevertheless to consider the National Curriculum as a list of subjects runs the danger of expressing it in a way which over-emphasises information and a narrow range of skills at the expense of the development of a full range of socially useful skills , attitudes and ideas , which is usually the concern of interested parents and can even be seen in a child 's view of the purpose of education .
29 The domination of the liberal view was reflected in the relatively narrow range of sources on which western scholars worked .
30 One complaint relating to the expenditure side criticises the narrow range of expenditures of the EC .
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