Example sentences of "to be found on [det] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Similarly , young emerging leaves and shoots that have not yet developed a tough skin are easier for fungus spores to penetrate as they are for sucking and biting insects , and this is why the first signs of mildew especially are always to be found on such tissue .
2 Too small even to be found on many maps , too hidden for any of its innocent affairs to be worthy of attention , Granard seemed no longer to be part of the priest 's past .
3 Sheep were also to be found on many farms in North Yorkshire , Cumbria , Wester Ross and Orkney .
4 Elaborate and costly sheep houses were to be found on most farms .
5 ‘ Macro ’ , a lens setting that enables the shooting of small subjects ( including colour transparencies ) at very close range , is also to be found on most camcorders .
6 The illustrations are not meant to be accurate — for use as maps — but they succeed brilliantly as indicators of the terrain likely to be found on these walks .
7 In short , the Citroën XM benefits from having the most advanced suspension system to be found on any production car .
8 When I went to Germany within a few days of the end of the war , it was rather remarkable to go to a Luftwaffe air field with many aircraft , all intact and fully serviceable , but with their tanks — dry not a drop of oil was to be found on those bases .
9 It is just one of a hundred different types of delicious seafood dishes to be found on this coast .
10 Using customary pseudonyms , the artists to be found on this album will give any Detroitphile palpitations , especially as they are previously-unheard tracks .
11 After some discussion , they felt that there was nothing else to be found on this site until the next ploughing and they would give it a miss until then .
12 Such a thing is certainly not to be found on this earth ; yet those who pick to pieces the open texture or verbal infelicities of an international Convention rarely pause to consider how , when legislation prepared in a single legal system is generally so verbose , obscure , and generally badly drafted , one can reasonably expect more of the product of many hands drawn from widely differing legal systems with different cultures , legal structures , and methods of legal reasoning and decision-making , entailing maximum flexibility , co-operation , and compromise .
13 In one sense the shock of industrialisation lay precisely in the stark contrast between the black , monotonous , crowded and scarred settlements and the coloured farms and hills immediately adjoining them , as in Sheffield , ‘ noisy , smoky , loathsome ( but ) … surrounded on all sides by some of the most enchanting countryside to be found on this planet ’ .
14 The cliffs of South Pembrokeshire are justly renowned for their fine , solid rock and that at Stennis is among the very best to be found on this length of coast ; a real delight to climb .
15 Views are to be found on both sides .
16 Trains of animals , each carrying 5 or 6 hundredweight , crossed the wilder stretches of the country or plodded along the narrow paved causeways that were to be found on both sides of the Pennines and as far south as Derbyshire .
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