Example sentences of "[vb base] [prep] [adj] " in BNC.
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31 | They also dance about possible new nest sites , and about water sources when water is needed to cool down the nest . |
32 | The evidence is provided by a number of low scarps which wind for considerable distances across the Mercurian surface . |
33 | This anger and fear about Old English degeneracy was a common complaint among numerous New English settlers . |
34 | Repeat for different positions of D . |
35 | Postponement of elections — Government reshuffle — Pardon for political prisoners — Refugee exodus to Greece |
36 | Italian-Albanian relations — Pardon for political prisoners — Discussions on aid |
37 | By-election reverses for ruling party — Economic expansion package — Pardon for condemned North Korean bomber |
38 | Innate behaviour repertoires only change through natural selection over successive generations and , although their range of tolerance , their capacities , can be extended , their capability in responding to rapid day to day environmental shifts is clearly limited . |
39 | Before doing so , review for non-jurisdictional error of law and for errors of fact must be considered in more detail . |
40 | It ignores the obvious discriminations which we make between similar treatment of different species within the animal kingdom . |
41 | They are , in brief , of the form If A , even if X , then still B. ( 1.4 ) Certain facts stated by the latter conditionals , together with effects being taken as later in time , are all that is needed to explain the difference we find or make between causal circumstances and causes on the one hand , and , on the other , their effects . |
42 | Because of the odd separations we make between qualitative and quantitative aspects of planning , enrolments tend to be regarded as the purview of the educational administrator . |
43 | I shall answer his question directly : we do not believe that the information should be denied to parents , but we believe that crude performance tables should not be used to distort the choices that parents make between different schools in Scotland , as would be the case if the Bill were implemented . |
44 | Again sex and religion combine through anthropological images invested with pain . |
45 | Farming 's image looks like getting another damaging self-inflicted dent as a result of what the public perceive as wholesale tax dodging . |
46 | We remain uninformed both about the now-extinct intermediates and the evolutionary processes that would have been responsible for the diversification of early multicellular animals into what we now perceive as distinct phyla , each with its own body plan . |
47 | The reasons for this appear to be ( a ) what the students perceive as cashable cheques in the job market and ( b ) a genuine intellectual concern to understand what is going on in their society . |
48 | By producing this Bill , and by everything that they have done , are doing and will do , the Government are endeavouring to give British Coal the time and the means to meet what we perceive as longer-term needs . |
49 | They wo n't buy what they perceive as Scottish products that are made in England . ’ |
50 | Fear for personal security can be a major factor affecting travel decisions . |
51 | The prime wild salmon which they catch sell for low prices — estimated to average £20 per fish — because of the impact of farmed salmon on the market . |
52 | A consortium of eight nuclear organizations had also formed the Nuclear Electricity Information Group , a propagandist organization which began a hard sell for nuclear power . |
53 | What will de-industrialisation mean for other social groups ? |
54 | The Opposition must withdrawn their policy , and do so today , or everyone will know what their policies mean for British Steel . |
55 | A study by the OECD tries to forecast what all these extra grey heads mean for public spending in different countries over the next 40 years , assuming that government policies remain unchanged . |
56 | Parents feed their babies , cuddle them , change their nappies , smooth cream on their bottoms , bath them , tickle them and generally communicate through bodily involvement . |
57 | Finally , in moments of vision the internal mind ‘ goes out into the external Mind ; they communicate through new kinds of sense experience — this is what the ‘ sublime ’ passages in Tintern Abbey and The Prelude are about . |
58 | Will my hon. Friend commend as compulsory reading part of our proceedings in Committee when for the first time hon. Members listened for two or two and a half hours to — |
59 | The boundaries of physics constantly change as new discoveries are made , e.g. the discovery of new fundamental particles . |
60 | Unfortunately there is very little hard research evidence as to the sort of residential provision which best suits people with differing levels or types of disability , and fashions change as new ideas evolve . |