Example sentences of "[noun] [coord] widely [verb] " in BNC.

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1 Libraries with very small branch establishments have always faced this problem , and it is perhaps not surprising that Scottish libraries who face the additional problem of very low population densities and widely spaced service points , do not score highly on ‘ amount ’ of formal training :
2 Taylor made it clear that he is not happy with Platt , scorer of England 's last five goals and widely regarded as the manager 's favourite footballing son .
3 However , the five committed themselves to remaining within the party , Charles , a former deputy leader of the JLP and widely acknowledged to be the leader of the dissident group , in effect mounting a leadership challenge .
4 He continued to make radio broadcasts and took one of the lead roles in Noye 's Fludde , based on the Chester Miracle Play and widely considered to be Benjamin Britten 's masterpiece of children 's music .
5 Solomon " Jesus " Hawala , the former head of PLAN security and widely accused of such crimes , was appointed chief of staff of the new Namibian Defence Force , despite the reported opposition of Nujoma and Geingob .
6 Manchester United and Norwich were also interested in the 21-year-old Malmo defender , a big hit in the European Championship finals and widely admired ever since .
7 Manchester United and Norwich were also interested in the 21-year-old Malmo defender , a big hit in the European Championship finals and widely admired ever since .
8 A curiosity in Enescu 's output is the way that he sometimes bracketed under the same opus number works of the same genre but widely separated in time : the two Op. 24 piano sonatas of 1924 and 1935 , for example ( the latter in fact called No. 3 , since the composer confessed that No. 2 existed only in his head and was never written down ) , or the more extreme case of the two Op. 26 cello sonatas of 1898 and 1935 .
9 The $10m trial of the wireless communications system based on very low-power , digital radio communications will involve personal handsets and microcellular technology to enable users to be immediately and constantly accessible — 1,000 trial participants will use the pocket phones to make and receive calls within the coverage area , on both home base stations and 500 or so public base stations in the downtown and other densely-populated or widely visited parts of Boise .
10 It provided a discordant note , for example , in the Pop Art exhibition organised by Norman Rosenthal for the Royal Academy and widely seen in other countries .
11 The technique of introducing a steam re-heat cycle ( in which steam is extracted from the turbine at an intermediate stage , raised to a higher temperature and reintroduced into the lower pressure stage ) had been pioneered in Britain by consultants and widely adopted in America .
12 This is not entirely explained by huge increases in population , as is widely propagated by the mass media and widely believed .
13 Based on beer and widely used for preserving and pickling , malt vinegar is also available as a strong , colourless , distilled vinegar which is particularly useful for preserving foods that have to last a long time .
14 In private , politicians discuss the wisdom of membership of the Exchange Rate Mechanism and widely predict a devaluation within the ERM whichever party is in power next weekend .
15 Another of his treasures , the seventh volume of Gaud Maybellome 's Encyclopaedia of Heavenly Signs , originally written in the language of Third Dominion academics but widely translated for the delectation of the proletariat , he 'd bought from a woman in the city of Jassick , who 'd approached him in a gaming room where he was attempting to explain cricket to a group of the locals , and said she recognized him from stories her husband ( who was in the Autarch 's army in Yzordderrex ) had told .
16 The Berlin Philharmonic is Germany 's ‘ national ’ orchestra and widely acclaimed as one of the most technically brilliant in the world , whose delivery is surely the nearest to musical perfection .
17 Lazy Lawrence is a powerful spirit and widely thought to inflict ‘ crampe and crookeing and fault in their footing ’ upon wrongdoers , as this local saying testifies :
18 South of the village is an area known locally as ‘ Hills and Holes ’ — deserted and overgrown quarry pits where the coarse limestone called ‘ ragstone ’ was quarried by the Romans and widely used in medieval times .
19 Similar movements have appeared elsewhere in North Africa : for example , the Tendance Islamique in Tunisia , the Front Islamique du Salut ( FIS ) in Algeria and the Green Revolution in Libya , which is now virtually the official programme of the Qaddafi regime and widely identified with the Colonel personally .
20 Our own experience in writing this chapter has confirmed our previous experience that this material is in short supply and widely dispersed , and some of it will disappear altogether if it is not soon collected .
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