Example sentences of "[vb infin] in [noun sg] the " in BNC.

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1 But they are intended to illustrate the very general point that we can not know in advance the belief systems of the communities we are studying ; an important part of good fieldwork practice is to get to know them and take them into account at all stages of the research , up to and beyond the time of publication .
2 ( Did you know in summer the gallants take their doxies out there for a picnic ?
3 The summit did not discuss in depth the question of a possible enlargement of the EC or of relations with countries of the European Free-Trade Area ( EFTA ) .
4 I shall discuss in detail the underlying issue of the culture-ideology of consumerism and the role of the TNCs in it , in the next chapter .
5 You should discuss in advance the reward and the terms for earning it .
6 When , on 19 March 1856 , the tsar issued a manifesto which spoke of the blessings which were to descend upon the empire as a result of the peace treaty , he envisaged " equal justice and equal protection for everyone , so that each can enjoy in peace the fruits of his own righteous labours " .
7 In Chapter 3 I will describe in detail the culture created to deal with these ‘ street-visible ’ offenders in a cell-block situation , but suggest the inertia surrounding the whole problem is more easily understood when we consider the social history of such illness ( Foucault 1967 ) , and see how the executive has always allocated the control of such ‘ drunken dossers ’ to the police .
8 ‘ It would be inconceivable , in the opinion of the Court , that Article 6(1) should describe in detail the procedural guarantees afforded to parties in a pending law suit and should not first protect that which alone makes it in fact possible to benefit from such guarantees , that is access to a court .
9 Put another way , appropriability problems created by spillovers may affect R activities more than D activities , and they may lessen in importance the closer R&D output gets to a specific product market .
10 It is very rarely the case in real life that we can predict in detail the form and content of the language which we will encounter , but , given all of the ethnographic information we have specified , the actual occurring utterance is much more likely ( hence , we assume , much more readily processed by the addressee ) than any of the following ‘ utterances ’ which did not occur :
11 We can not predict in advance the way in which a case will be decided , nor can we find any ex post rationality to explain why cases were categorised in different ways .
12 Only rarely in the late 1940s did he achieve in paint the finesse that now characterised his figure drawings .
13 The Companies Act 1985 does not specify in detail the business to be transacted at an AGM but it will normally include :
14 While some schools did evaluate in committee the development of the library in the context of the project — and it is clear that developments in pedagogy were attributed at least partly to the project — we were not made aware of any which specifically monitored the number of times children and teachers borrowed or read books purchased specifically with project funds .
15 However , even though default may not result in crystallisation the company will be in breach of contract and the chargee will have appropriate contractual remedies .
16 He would understand in detail the working of the mechanism of the clock , which enables it to function as it does .
17 In the first published street legislation , during the reign of Henry III , the new halberds were formally required to ‘ keep in order the unruly ’ .
18 Carol looked to right and left to try and keep in mind the way they were going , but all the lanes looked exactly alike in the snow , and she knew she would never be able to find the route back to Threlkeld by herself .
19 Sociolinguists should therefore keep in mind the possibility that some women 's more standard speech could reflect the fact that class categorisation assumes parity between married couples , whereas in certain relevant ways they do not have parity .
20 True , pest and disease may follow , but we should always keep in mind the possibility that the initial breach in the defences is due to physical disorder .
21 His results showed that children below the age of seven years did not structure their stories or explanations coherently , nor did they keep in mind the extent of the listener 's ignorance .
22 To help you keep in mind the five main techniques we have invented a mnemonic , MACRO , which stands for Memory , Aims , Concentration , Review and Organisation .
23 You should keep in mind the phrase " an undertone of unease " and aim for that .
24 We must keep in mind the possibility that the two books reflect a later atmosphere in their accounts of distant events .
25 As we do so , we shall keep in mind the fact that these very same ingredients , at least in some rudimentary form , must have arisen spontaneously on the early Earth , otherwise cumulative selection , and therefore life , would never have got started in the first place .
26 At the same time , we must keep in mind the need for the security forces to do that job in a way which not only remains within the law but inspires confidence in the whole community .
27 Will the Minister keep in mind the fact that there is a roadblock on investment in the construction industry because of the problem of landlocking ?
28 The researcher must also keep in mind the fact that some parishes were ‘ peculiar jurisdictions ’ independent of the usual ecclesiastical courts .
29 Throughout the drafting process the drafter should keep in mind the objectives the terms are intended to achieve .
30 For selective pressures for linguistic ability could easily reverse in ontogeny the order I maintain would be needed in phylogeny .
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