Example sentences of "[adj] [verb] [adv prt] in " in BNC.

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1 Fares in other regions are due to go up in May .
2 he , he were due to go back in the army and he overstayed
3 The crowd of 7,000 — Aberdeen 's lowest of the season — had little to enthuse over in a drab second half in which Aberdeen had several excellent chances but displayed their old failing of not converting demonstrable outfield superiority into goals .
4 The Foreign Office accommodation , with the possible exception of the Foreign Secretary 's residence , would be almost the same as that laid down in the competition .
5 It was also over 50 per cent more than that laid down in codes for the relief of famine as a basic subsistence diet ( Kynch 1989 ) .
6 I am unaware of any allegations of malpractice at the prison I visited , but it has often been claimed elsewhere that frauds are common among both staff and prisoners responsible for storing , weighing and distributing food , and that the actual consumption per prisoner can be up to 20 per cent below that laid down in the regulations .
7 It was enacted that the vill should not be required to pay the cost of service beyond the county boundary , that the equipment required of troops should not go beyond that laid down in the Statute of Winchester , and that service overseas should not be required as an obligation of tenure .
8 In effect , the principle is the same as that laid down in G. v. G. ( Minors : Custody Appeal ) [ 1985 ] 1 W.L.R. 647 .
9 The managing director makes very sure that he knows all that goes on in his firm .
10 At the door is an insight into the true melding nature of all that goes on in Wainfleet — half a wooden beer barrel from Bateman 's Brewery , planted with flowers and set beside an iron shoe scraper .
11 What do , in terms of erm , terms of prostitution , is that act , is that , does that bother you or are you not bo bothered really about the fact that that goes on in the area ?
12 And most of that goes on in the daytime
13 If we are outside , we shall not enjoy the advantages of a single currency or have the investment in this country of those companies — our own and overseas firms — which want to invest in the core of Europe and enjoy full access to all that goes on in Europe .
14 You may have got quite friendly now , but she does n't necessarily know all that goes on in Robert 's mind . ’
15 This goes back in section two , yes , and when they give you your induction report , which we 've still got to put some results on , that goes back in section three .
16 er there 's a bit of stew in there , would you like some of that heated up in microwave ?
17 It would be awful to sit around in pitch black .
18 The Orient Express is due to pull in in May .
19 Which perhaps not revolutionary but to me it was er it was but of all these things that er we 've done lots of things you know , but the thing that I , that stands out in my memory is is that er it 'd be about nineteen forty eight , there was a a one of the old members who I worked with was , lived alone and he was very ill .
20 Because of the accident that , in the early days , a high proportion of the best anthropological field research wan carried out in societies which were made up of exogamous unilineal descent groups , many textbooks give the impression that unilineal descent is the normal pattern in primitive societies and hence that the distinction between kinship ( of common substance ) and affinity is normally clear-out and unambiguous .
21 Evaluation such as that carried out in Example F is likely to misrepresent what has been achieved in the teaching unless it takes into account pupils ' initial performances and the relative difficulty of what they are learning .
22 I had said that her view was unreasonable and Syl was free to go out in the evening as he wished .
23 Use of mundic tailed off in the Fifties .
24 Picnickers explain that they are prepared to carry on in spite of the odds .
25 One therefore gets trapped into a situation where it appears much easier to carry on in the business than to divest , or move out .
26 One answer is that studies of comprehension are generally very much easier to carry out in a controlled way than studies of spontaneous production .
27 It did n't take her long to decide she had precisely two choices — well , one , really , because even though it was n't cold it would look wrong to go out in thin cotton to the sort of party he was talking about .
28 ‘ Whatever can he do for a living , if he 's free to ramble about in the middle of the working week in April ?
29 She would have got soaked had they stayed any longer , and Ven was quite right to see it was not sensible to amble around in the pouring rain .
30 ‘ People on the estate are afraid to go out in the dark and even too afraid to open their doors . ’
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