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

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1 To make the most of fragrant flowers such as these sweetly scented golden and white freesias and white lilies , display them by massing the flowers closely together in side-by-side containers .
2 ‘ … with so small diluting medium as 100 to 1 of the medicine , if many succussions by means of a powerful machine are forced into it , medicines are then developed which , especially in the higher degrees of dynamization , act almost immediately , but with furious even dangerous , violence , especially in weakly patients , without having a lasting , mild reaction of the vital principle . ’
3 Serum concentrations of pepsinogen A and C were measured in serologically Helicobacter pylori negative blood transfusion donors ( 127 ) as reference population , and in patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome ( 24 ) , duodenal ulcer ( 50 ) , hypertrophic gastropathy ( 5 ) , and chronic renal failure ( 50 ) , and also in reflux oesophagitis patients on longterm omeprazole treatment ( 28 ) .
4 As well as losing their positions in arguably Britain 's most loved independent band , the couple were also upset because their circle of friends disintegrated around them .
5 on the camp site , in somewhere east
6 In New York it was acid art in knocked-together Lower-East-Side lofts , and a meeting with John Wilcock on the verge of quitting the Voice and moving to Walter Bowart 's new East Village Other .
7 Unlike the UK , in France dairy cows are eligible in predominantly dairy areas ( e.g. the Auvergne uplands ) with a limit of 10 per farm unit ( higher limits in ‘ haute montagne ’ ) .
8 They deserve close examination especially by those in predominantly family and part-time farming areas .
9 She has never been , she says , ‘ pushy ’ and as a late starter her career has not taken in much Shakespeare , or any film .
10 Past Guéthary and fifteen kilometres in all south of Biarritz is Saint-Jean-de-Luz .
11 In all 34% of this acreage was cut twice — mainly in Cumbria , Leicestershire and parts of Derbyshire .
12 Another approach has been to apply regime theory as developed by political scientists to areas regulated by international law.150 — In all cases , a particular claim would have to be carefully examined to determine the legitimacy of an erga omnes claim , which can not be presumed .
13 The Chairman of English Heritage noted that , together with the £2 million awarded last year , the present sum will help maintain the buildings for posterity , ( although it is estimated that in all £185 million is needed for essential repairs over the next decade ) .
14 In all £2,276 was donated , which enabled me to buy 650 .
15 A range of down-hole and ground geophysical techniques have been applied to determine whether fuller 's earth is present , with some success in all areas .
16 In all 79% ( 23949 of 30253 ) of general practitioner referrals were for one of the seven examinations covered in the guideline booklet ( chest , skull , spine , abdomen , barium investigation , excretion urography , and limbs and joints ) .
17 Many people own a share of this gold badge with me , my wife and family , who have helped and supported me in whatever I have been involved in especially Betty .
18 The posts may not necessarily be particularly lucrative ( regius professorships are worth £100 a year , religiously paid in quarterly £25 cheques ) , but they are at some of the pinnacles of national life , they open doors and they command respect .
19 It proved technically difficult to test whether these cells fled from acid conditions because they died when exposed to too great a gradient , although they could move about well in extremely acid conditions .
20 Not so popular was the experimental survival section of the course which always seemed to be carried out in extremely inclement weather with a helicopter helping to increase the discomfort of tossing about on a life raft in Plymouth Sound .
21 In naturally acid areas , or where acid rain has made the water more acid , lead pipes are a serious hazard to health because the water strips the metal from the pipe walls and it ends up coming out of the tap .
22 Though individually translucent and almost invisible , euphausiids have enough pigment and are present in sufficiently density to tint the water red or orange .
23 He put it away , a bit of hesitation there in the Oxford United defence , and it 's a goal to Spurs scored by Gary Mafford , in fact he 's put the ball in the net ; mistake from Andy Melville gave Spurs a corner , the ball was n't cleared , Gascoigne played a one two , was blocked by United , it came out to Mafford in the end and the goal 's in so Spurs take the lead after eight minutes .
24 We arrived back in Brazil on 6 February to our new location in So Bento do Sul in the state of Santa Catarina , a little bit further south than Dois Vizinhos .
25 A Disaffection shares in that uncertainty , and in so doing acknowledges a connection with a certain whether-or-not that we meet with in the plays of Shakespeare .
26 On both her outings Silk Slippers has thrust her attractive nose in front just where it matters and in so doing has established herself not merely as a valuable stud prospect , but an exciting candidate for next year 's 1,000 Guineas and Oaks .
27 For Page has deliberately divided his dancers into the traditional hierarchy of principles , soloists and corps , and in so doing reminds us of all the great courts of 19th century ballets .
28 But such homosexuality must in some sense be repressed ; overt ‘ masculine ’ homosexuality is subversive , says Irigaray , because it openly interprets the law according to which society operates and in so doing threatens it : ‘ once the penis itself becomes merely a means to pleasure , pleasure among men , the phallus loses its power ’ ( This Sex , 74 , 24 — 8 , 128 , 171 , 192 — 3 ; her emphases ) .
29 The Victorians tried to spoil the pleasures of puddings with foolish economies and in so doing brought Britain 's once fine reputation to its culinary knees .
30 In the Chairman 's Address by the Rev. Arnold Thomas quoted above he went on to expand on a definition of the Nonconformist Conscience and in so doing showed how social attitudes and religious arguments had become fused .
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