Example sentences of "in [noun] [conj] [pron] [verb] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 The authors propose two ways forward : they encourage a change in attitudes and they call for some specific legislative measures .
2 Bockley had served over 23 years at the chapel in Longdendale when he died in 1519 .
3 She lived in hope as she waited for her lung swap
4 So too in memory research ; if an animal can not be shown to have learned except by changing its behaviour and this change in behaviour can only be induced by some form of stress or constraint , then the changes in biochemistry that one finds in relation to the learning must include the changes in relation to the stress — including all the types of neuromodulators discussed in the last chapter .
5 She just said a bed , so I told her there were special beds that we are very useful in fact very necessary in cases and we tend to be short of them
6 ( 1966 : 72 ) recognized such unobtrusive measures have found favour in field-work and I discovered at an early stage that the problem remains one of revealing the structural warts of the system while somehow indicating that this need not be seditious ; and indeed might even be of some value .
7 That is why the goods for which we are responsible are being labelled in Russian when they go to the former Soviet Union .
8 Now , resentment exploded in Cardiff as he rounded on Rohmer .
9 Mrs Clinton tells Vanity Fair , apparently without weighing the truth of the charges against Mr Bush : ‘ What Bill does n't understand is you 've got ta do the same thing in response as you do in negative advertising . ’
10 Sometimes my brothers and I were allowed to get out of the car with him and peek at the movie in progress while he spoke to the manager or cashier .
11 But oh , the glory and the convenience of skiing in resorts where you step into your bindings and ski down to the lift without setting foot to snow , where you cruise all day on networks so meticulously designed that you have but to descend to find another fan of lifts at your disposal .
12 The ‘ executive ’ power today is important in part because it carries with it such wide powers of initiation of legislation .
13 Even then you should have caught a glimpse of Nigel in orbit as he roared to victory in the British Grand Prix …
14 Shoppers in Manchester 's Moss Side watched in horror as he crashed into parked cars .
15 The following morning , Lucien nearly retched in horror when he walked into the practise court and saw Amber Epipheny conversing with Resenence Jeopardy .
16 There is no indication that there was any direct connection between the twelve ( of whom it is said in Acts that they stayed in Jerusalem ) and the advent of ministry in the churches in the gentile world .
17 In World War II , when German bombing destroyed the Swire head office in the City , Swire moved his entire staff to his mother 's house in Harlow and they commuted to London together .
18 Secondly I think the sad thing is is that at one time the idea of the foyer bar was the fact that er mother 's and children go in for a coffee facility or tea facility now I 'm I 'm one of one of the problems about criticism is is perhaps they do n't know all the facts and one of the facts which I think astounded me was the actual local police stopped that and said that that was n't permissible for if you were selling alcohol then it did n't it was n't right that that children under age and young children were allowed in the same area and that was that was changed then we got a new a new police superintendent and he said it was permissible and then we got another super he went they do n't stay very long in Harlow and we got somebody else came along and he said no that is n't permissible so we got very schizophrenic about what you could do with the foyer bar one minute you could have and the idea of about telling people and there young mothers going shopping come here for coffee , cakes for the children etc stop that we 've now got a new superintendent in Harlow and I think with applied going back to him and saying well please advice us can we or ca n't we ?
19 How does Freud get or to refer to Marie-Anne 's erm subject couple weeks , how could Freud think that libido was involved in groups when he says in the book that she 's gon na tell us about tha that society and civilization erm is in conflict with indiv wi with , with individual 's erm libidinal self-interest , th th their personal libidinal desires .
20 With the Swiss themselves it is a great favourite as one of the most varied and beautiful walking areas in the country ; in addition when it comes to food , the country towns and inns of the Emmental enjoy an exceptional reputation even for Switzerland , a reputation that one tends to link with the Emmental farming communities ' repute as the foremost pioneers of Swiss agriculture .
21 She has hung out in cities When we go to bed together , sometimes the conversation turns to …
22 But here 's Rozario Gemmell Black Pearce is up in support but he goes for the long ball in and Hill met it first .
23 'Cos it , for example , in support when it came to the
24 No he no go upstairs th in pairs if they wan na do it , quietly .
25 The interest in birds that he shared with them transcended all prejudices and the racism rife among the resident colonials .
26 ‘ She 's remembered she found a brochure for a hotel in Northumberland and she leapt to the conclusion that Garry was going to surprise her with an unexpected holiday .
27 It was a bright clear spring morning when the boat docked in Rosslare and I disembarked in Eire .
28 The Customs seal on the container was still in tact when it arrived at basket-ware importers Ronald Kaufmann 's in Norwich .
29 Finn stood there helplessly for a moment , his own breath coming in gasps as he looked into the wild eyes of his superior .
30 Provided that an object is conceived to be real , reactions to it are the same in kind whether one happens to be perceiving or imagining it ; and if in the latter case one reacts less strongly , that is because one is also less aware of it .
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