Example sentences of "this [vb -s] in " in BNC.

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1 This enacts in statutory form the rule laid down in Christie v. Leachinsky ( H.
2 This flies in the face of the cautious nature of the Bush administration .
3 This flies in the face of the most fundamental principles of the historian 's — or indeed any scholarly — profession .
4 This flies in the face of the current public policy to bring about greater competition in the professions and more choice for the consumer .
5 This removes the emphasis from public transport , the role this plays in employment and the fostering of economic and social development .
6 This involves in particular cultivating certain attitudes and skills associated with education in general ( see Chapter 1 , pp. 2 , 4 , 6 – 10 ) .
7 As you would expect , this differs in certain material respects from the protection appropriate under the general rules for individual private investors .
8 To start with , there are more energy levels : for a d 3 system , for instance , the ground free ion term is usually 4 F , but this splits in an octahedral field into three levels — 4 A 2g , 4 T 2g and 4 T 1g , just as the f orbitals split into a 2u , t 2u and t 1u sets in an octahedral field .
9 And this persists in the work of political scientists , sociologists and others who have been impressed by the approach .
10 This represents in our view a major gap in the strategic policy framework for such an extensive rural county and one which is becoming increasingly in need of filling .
11 This produces in some islands higher than average demand and in others lower than average demand .
12 As well as letting the head office in Columbus keep track of its new siblings , this builds in lower costs from economies of scale .
13 Indeed , this has in effect been the argument made by many international lawyers in the years after Hiroshima .
14 This has in effect reduced the amount of space devoted to Western art to 25% of what it was before .
15 The ‘ intercom ’ of the Quartet 's title refers not only to technological developments in information-processing systems , but also to how these developments have affected intercourse between individuals in everyday situations , and how this has in turn made possible a new role in society for narrative fiction .
16 The development of systematic geography has provided an unhealthy climate for the survival of mythological anomalies but this has in no way frustrated the human imagination ; the world of fable has simply been transferred to outer space .
17 This has in fact occurred in the advanced capitalist countries , and one main consequence has been to limit industrial conflict primarily to economic issues , as against larger issues of the control of the enterprise , and to bring about a substantial degree of integration of workers into the existing mode of production .
18 This has in fact happened .
19 This has in large measure been achieved under the SGSA 1982 ( see Chapter 5 ) .
20 How much this matters in practice depends on the significance that levels of attainment come to acquire in the grouping of children within and between schools , and in the perceptions of pupils by their teachers .
21 All this matters in a system with overlapping powers , with a tendency to divide Manhattan and its liberal politicians and the mayor from the concerns of the outer boroughs .
22 The real joy of an instrument like this lies in playing it .
23 The pleasure of a design like this lies in its symmetry , and the way in which the flowers are arranged .
24 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 .
25 To answer this lies in both the yarn and the individual pattern .
26 This lies in the northern part of the Empire and beyond it is Ostland , the northernmost of the Empire 's provinces .
27 Respublica derives its authority from the continuous acknowledgement of citizens and this lies in the recognition of their general obligation to obey law rather than in their response to specific precepts .
28 One crucial reason for this lies in the way only one element of Marxist work on the state is used by pluralist critics .
29 The reason for this lies in the fact that the physics depends neither on the states alone nor on the observables alone but upon their interrelation .
30 The reason for this lies in the limitations to which I have already referred .
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