Example sentences of "of the range of " in BNC.

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1 The overflowing congregation at his funeral was evidence of the range of people he touched ; politicians , military , Maori people , clergy , welfare workers .
2 What is significant is the extension since 1979 of the range of issues in the first category which the Conservative leadership regards as ‘ high politics ’ , that is , which it regards as being within its own sphere of decision-making .
3 That is a direct result of the sudden increase in competition and the consequent expansion of the range of services and the size of firms in order to respond to it .
4 Observation of the range of products being made in the late 1980s by Nairobi 's jua kali artisans — those who work under the ‘ hot sun ’ — confirm that Mutang'ang'i 's story is far from unique .
5 The first sets a few months ago were well over £2000 which would put them out of the range of all private and a lot of charter boats .
6 It 's a taste that seems to be catching on in Japan , replacing a traditional fancy for whale meat , which is now priced well out of the range of most Japanese pockets .
7 Mindful of the gaps in his reading , and aware of the range of books in Mr Noble 's library now denied to him , Edward and Helen scoured the second-hand bookshops for bargains and texts necessary for his matriculation test in October .
8 This example illustrates well that one has to be aware of the range of possible treatments and restorations to which even perfectly genuine objects could have been subjected .
9 Humans are getting you down , and you need to slink away on your own , down to the bottom of the garden , or to a peaceful patio out of the range of everyone .
10 From June 1 , the cost of the range of services including cashing or paying in cheques will rise from £2 to £5 .
11 LGC 's skill is in fine detection , such as identifying the source of a one-off water contamination rather than routine studies , because of the range of staff and equipment — ‘ We are not generally geared up to carry out analyses on thousands of samples at a time ’ .
12 ( iii ) In the context of their own writing and reading pupils should be introduced to the complex regularity that underlies the spelling of words with inflectional endings , eg bead-ing , bead-ed , bed-d-ing , bed-d-ed. ( iv ) Teaching should encourage discussion of the range of vocabulary , eg from informal to formal , everyday to specialist , its use in different settings and for different purposes and the effect of particular choices of words , eg the kinds of topics slang is used for ; the situations in which slang is used ; the need for specialist terms and the effects of their use outside the specialist group .
13 They should learn to think of appropriateness in written language in terms of these functions and of the range of audiences that writers address , considering the effects , for example , of inappropriately formal vocabulary in personal letters or of colloquial expressions in impersonal writing .
14 On the evidence of the range of writers discussed this is not the case .
15 The practical consequence of the range of laws we have described was that , by 1979 , the freedom to engage in peaceful protest in this country was traditionally dependent not on the law but rather on the benevolent exercise of discretion by those in power .
16 It seems to me that the graded-test system will simply carry out these functions more efficiently than the system of GCSE , followed by A levels or one of the range of non-school practical certificate tests .
17 Together they constitute a representative sample of the range of work carried out in English inspired and informed by the broad spectrum of Kristeva 's influential writings , from her early semiotically based work , notably Revolution in Poetic Language , to the later psychoanalytically oriented studies of abjection , love and melancholia .
18 It is apparent that physical appearance and presence are powerful aspects of non-verbal communication , and the amount and variety of make-up products , jewellery , perfume , aftershave , spectacle frames in department stores is an eloquent reflection of the range of taste .
19 The story of the Scouts is too familiar to require further repetition , except in so far as some acknowledgement of the movement is worthwhile in order to complete this description of the range of voluntary youth provision in the period .
20 Nonetheless , some idea of the range of possibilities may be gained from the hypothetical burial curves shown on Fig. 5 .
21 The implications of this would seem to be that 1975–85 did not see a process of structural change , but simply the latest in a series of chaotic attempts by central actors to use local government as a means of achieving their ends , without any appreciation of the range of different interests reflected in its various policy networks , and which are also linked by various routes to the still disaggregated parts of the centre .
22 Crying , colic and night-waking are only a tiny portion of the range of symptoms which experienced mothers report as disappearing and reappearing with dietary changes — changes in maternal diet for the breast-feeding mother , or changes in infant diet directly .
23 Man is a primate and is at the top of the range of species , followed by gorillas , orang-utans and chimpanzees ; tarsiers and lemurs represent the lower end of development .
24 Even within the United Kingdom , an Act of Parliament ( the Northern Ireland Parliament , set up under the Government of Ireland Act 1920 which withheld certain powers from it ) has been held to be limited in respect of the range of authority which it conferred ( Belfast Corporation v O.D. Cars Ltd [ 1960 ] AC 490 ) .
25 Beyond that , we 've got to assume that the main source for instruments was the same as for everybody else who lived out of the range of urban merchandising , and that 's catalogues : Montgomery Ward , Sears & Roebuck and places like that .
26 It was not easy to store the counterfoils of sale vouchers out of the range of white ants .
27 As we have seen , the Gospels were written to meet that need , so by examining carefully their contents we will gain an overall impression of the range of information which the early Christians deemed to be necessary for an adequate ongoing commitment to be made .
28 So we should like to see an authoritative source of comparative APRs : both typical rates and the extremes of the range of rates , for different types of credit and ( where this makes a significant difference ) different types of purchase financed by the same type of credit .
29 Wide reading , and as great an experience as possible of the best imaginative literature , are essential to the full development of an ear for language , and to a full knowledge of the range of possible patterns of thought and feeling made accessible by the power and range of language .
30 Part of the range of galvanised steel arch formers available from Expamet .
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