Example sentences of "[adv] of [noun] of [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 Clinical observation is extremely productive of theories and hypotheses , but not of verification of hypotheses .
2 He had secured the support not just of members of parties which had formerly been members of the ruling coalition , but also of the Democratic Party of the Left ( PDS — the former Communist Party ) and the Greens .
3 I 've heard also of courses of injections which remove it in the short term but result in a worse incidence of cellulite after the treatment has worn off .
4 We have watched the drying up of provision of aids and equipment .
5 She was involved in the London Women 's Film Group and the setting up of Cinema of Women in the late seventies ; then there was a sense of a political project , opportunities for women to meet and discuss ideas and motivations .
6 A committee under J. H. Whitley proposed the establishment of joint industrial councils made up of representatives of employers and workers , operating on national , district and works level to resolve peacefully industrial disputes .
7 Another well-documented foreign garrison in Egypt ( this time directed against trouble from the south as well as subversion from inside ) was made up of contingents of Jews stationed in Upper Egypt at Edfu ( Elephantine ) , at the Third Cataract of the Nile .
8 An obvious problem is that a text is not made up of collections of sentences , but of sentences organised into a coherent whole .
9 According to Mary Frances Lyon , who discovered that only one of the X chromosomes is active in female mammals , it is completely random which particular X chromosome is inactivated in any given cell , so an individual female is made up of clones of cells in which either the maternal or paternal X chromosome has been switched off .
10 He had hinted darkly of rumours of police incompetence and attempts to smother establishment scandal .
11 She constructs out of bits of stories heard on the radio elaborate dramatic scenarios which parody genres such as the thriller , the spy novel , and the popular romance .
12 Two cyclists chased him , but he ducked in and out of blocks of flats and vanished .
13 The island is small , no homes are out of sight of others , even in the farmland ; people know each other well and , as in all rural communities , they also know each other 's business .
14 The Iraqi military leaders were arriving out of sight of cameras , under allied escort , and stripped of their weapons .
15 Most of Wordsworth 's readers who have left us their opinions were middle-class , but we must remember that he addressed his poetry to readers of all classes and we do not know how much the choice of natural subject matter may have meant to urban dwellers who lived out of sight of flowers and trees .
16 I had erm you had to get up , out of bed of Sundays ?
17 This puts services which used to be available free from the hospital out of reach of patients on low income and those with chronic health conditions who require multidisciplinary care .
18 Wherever they are kept , they should be out of reach of children and , where appropriate , under lock and key .
19 Potassium permanganate , an oxidising agent , may be ordered from some chemists but should be handled with care and be kept out of reach of children .
20 Are kettle flexes , irons and saucepan handles kept out of reach of children when in use ?
21 If there is not room for this you might utilize the space by making slots in the counter top to take your cooking knives , or you could suspend them from a magnetic bar just above out of reach of children .
22 Poorly trained managers who found themselves faced with new , rapidly changing technologies developed technophobia out of fear of things they did not understand .
23 Beware of classic howlers such as trees growing out of tops of heads ( the fact that the tree is many yards to the rear of the head in question will not be apparent if there are no visual clues as to the depth of the scene ) .
24 The point is that we can compute out of sequences of utterances , taken together with background assumptions about language usage , highly detailed inferences about the nature of the assumptions participants are making , and the purposes for which utterances are being used .
25 I am sure the warm affinities between Scots and Jews arise out of appreciation of herrings .
26 Upwards of £12m of tax-payers ' money has been invested in these new forests and at present , in Caithness , forestry has provided only three full-time jobs for local people ; at the cost of the greatest act of environmental vandalism perpetrated in Scotland this century .
27 I have details here of scores of cases , but as I can not take up the time of the House in referring to all of them , I will pick one or two examples .
28 Well really that 's l by and large what groups is all about so it 's clearly that they do and there 's some cases here of sort of cyclists cycling harder and faster when they 've got they 're training with other cyclists or erm when they 're training against the clock .
29 Yet after the end of the Franco-Prussian War ( 1871 ) , none of the great powers fought one another for more than forty years , although these years were full , if not of wars , at least of rumours of wars .
30 As noted above a plan is essential to the proper description of a property , and this is especially so in the case of leases the title to which is to be registered ( Chapter 12 ) , and indeed of leases of flats in general .
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