Example sentences of "[verb] little change [prep] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 True , Shearer got little change from the skirmish with Neil Ruddock , his pal from Southampton days .
2 Randalstown also report little change in personnel , having lost the pregnant Carol Burns , but added Ballymoney 's flying winger Sonia Innis .
3 According to the OECD survey , the privatization programme involved little change in management or improvement in efficiency .
4 While these figures show the decline since the late nineteenth and early twentieth century of appointments of such politicians , they also show little change since 1918 .
5 Figure 1 shows an exemplar excitatory postsynaptic potential ( e.p.s.p. ) that was evoked for 250 trials at 0.1Hz , and whose mean and standard deviation ( s.d. ) showed little change over time ( Fig. 1 b ) .
6 The outcome of the local government election showed little change for the main parties , and SDLP MP Eddie McGrady said the Secretary of State would see the results revealed nothing that he did not already know .
7 Share prices showed little change throughout the day however and the FT-SE 100-Share Index closed just 1.0 down on the day at 2,817.0 , with just under 593 million shares changing hands .
8 For adult offenders the picture showed little change from previous years and indeed the number of sentenced adult male prisoners had increased .
9 There are no recent counts of breeding pairs round either of the western harbours , but counts of young there indicate little change since 1947 and suggest a total population of rather under 100 pairs .
10 The postcrania are only known for ‘ Kenyapithecus ’ from Maboko Island , and they indicate little change from the generalized arboreal quadrupedalism present in the early Miocene hominoids like Proconsul .
11 Though residents find little change in the quality of living under these arrangements , they are generally pleased with the traffic calming that has resulted , though less so than those who live in the streets that have been completely rebuilt .
12 The JDA annual report of 1989 saw little change in the Soviet military posture in the Far East and its potential threat to Japan , despite President Gorbachev 's announcement earlier in the year that its forces stationed in the Far East would be cut by 120,000 [ see p. 36642 ] .
13 The Philips Report ( HMSO 1954 ) forecast little change in the dependency ratio overall in the following twenty-five years ( 1954–79 ) , on the assumption that the same proportion of persons would continue to be employed in each age-group .
14 After examining non-vocational adult education in England and Wales , this report suggested little change in the existing division of responsibility for adult education between LEAs , the university extra-mural departments and voluntary bodies such as the WEA .
  Next page