Example sentences of "[adv] some of " in BNC.

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1 Eventually some of your replies to advertisements or general enquiries about vacancies will result in your being called for an interview .
2 The men of the Old World were determined mariners and eventually some of their ships found a route to Ulthuan .
3 The RNA working copies drift around the interior of the cells , and eventually some of them bump into protein-making machines called ribosomes .
4 Presumably some of those who were still loyal to Richard kept him informed of the deteriorating political situation , and of the contacts between his brothers and the rebels .
5 As certain areas of Great Britain , for example , take on some of the characteristics of divided societies , the focus of this study also has a relevance , of increasing proportion , outside the province and beyond what many residents in Northern Ireland might see as most directly pertinent to them .
6 Dealing with people came naturally and was in many ways the most important part of the job , but there was more that could come only with experience , and Charles was there to pass on some of the things he had learned over thirty-three years , some of them the hard way .
7 The former Ryder Cup man was not here to work on swings ; merely to pass on some of his knowledge on course management .
8 It also exonerates the community from taking on some of these tasks — caring for the elderly , the chronically sick and the disabled , and it is this aspects of the emphasis on family responsibility that produces scepticism about the motivation of exponents of active citizenship : it is seen as a substitute for the state 's responsibility for the social element of the citizenship of entitlement .
9 William Parker takes on some of the baritone material with unabashed lyricism and plangency , leaving Elly Ameling to bring refreshing charm and beauty of tone to the soprano Mélodies .
10 All these simple garden activities depend upon the real involvement and enjoyment of an adult who loves a garden , and can pass on some of his or her knowledge to children as they work and play together .
11 This urban base once distinguished these movements from such parties in Europe , although extreme-right phenomena there in the 1980s have ( with exceptions ) now taken on some of the distributional features of the British extreme right 's support .
12 After the collapse and division of the NF , the BNP began in late 1989 and early 1990 to take on some of the former 's street-presence .
13 ‘ After I win , I 'll take on some of the opponents Eubank has beaten , and do a better job , ’ said Piper .
14 The reason for this lies in a theory called secondary reinforcement which says that the praise will become associated with the more powerful extra reward and take on some of the strong reinforcing properties of that reward .
15 Whitehead Mann has taken on some of the highest salaried job searches in Britain , comparable with Russell Reynolds ' recruiting of Bob Bauman for Beecham ; an assignment on behalf of a major British company looking for a chief executive to run their operations in Australia earned the firm £333 000 , according to the popular press ( on the basis that the successful candidate was to be paid an annual salary approaching £1m . ) .
16 The aim is to ease the stress of house-buying by giving advice and taking on some of the workload .
17 ( Pat has a good strong Catholic conscience , a desire to pass on some of her good fortune . )
18 Father even allows quite unrelated youngsters to join the family group if they will take on some of the work of baby-carrying .
19 The stations of the South African Boer Republics , themselves huge concessions to the modern world which the Boers would originally much rather have done without , took on some of the dour , flinty character of Dutch Reformed Calvinism .
20 Since some of the restrictions have been taken off , team members are beginning to take on some of the old supervisors tasks — requesting stores , requesting maintenance , in general , being more responsible .
21 He says we know that the Victorians went to the gentleman 's club in the day and the brothel at night , before going home , but we could take on some of their values .
22 ‘ As a management team we are all excited by the buy-out and we hope the new owners will take on some of our ideas and extend the services that we provide . ’
23 And then they learnt the music later on some of them and
24 The issuing house will underwrite the issue ( i.e. agree to buy up any unsold shares ) for a fee , and will generally pass on some of the risk to sub-underwriters , who are usually large institutional investors .
25 that if we pass on some of your comments at the end of the section , maybe they 'll be able to arrange , maybe in two or three months time a visit that most of us can make , particularly those of you who missed it , because it is an important experience , but obviously quite difficult to arrange , because it involves real tenants and real people but we can pass that back , and I 'm sure the officers will consider it .
26 As the train slowed to a halt , he remembered other drivers , mostly some of the ‘ old hands ’ , talk about Bridge 173 and how some of them joked about the ‘ strange sightings ’ near it .
27 She punctuates her conversation with snatches of song , hummed through closed lips , then recites slowly some of the words she has written .
28 The purpose of this is to disapply some of the more onerous administrative procedures which would otherwise be required to be carried out .
29 That is , the reader will be forced to use these ‘ texts ’ to reconstruct , not just some relevant discourse subjects in the presupposition pool , following Venneman , but rather some of the elements of the topic framework existing when these discourse fragments were produced .
30 President Bush 's administration has revealed its plan to save the Pacific Northwest 's spotted owl , and thereby some of the " old growth " forests which are its homeland .
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