Example sentences of "[noun] [prep] [adv] in the " in BNC.

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1 ‘ We are not playing kick and rush , ’ he insisted when driving out to a friend 's hotel in the Derwent Valley below Consett , pausing now and then to savour the uncluttered Durham landscape , his heart for ever in the North-east of England .
2 ‘ Luck was on your side for once in the form of this remarkable pugilist , this amazing pair of fists ! ’
3 On the livestock side Stuart Ashworth warned that beef producers should brace themselves for a cut in the Beef Special Premium ‘ the base for Scotland is 244,000 male animals but there will be at least 300,000 head this year so we can anticipate a cut of somewhere in the region of 20-25 per cent in BSP payments .
4 We 've been getting a wee bit of light in now in the mornings , eh ?
5 She would spend all day with her daughter and then work on her designs until late in the evening .
6 The only answer was a low shout of many voices from outside in the distance , coming closer .
7 Who would even remember my name twelve months from now in the midst of another winter , unless in the context of some old dirty joke or dated ribaldry ?
8 With Amdahl Corp faced with an uphill struggle to adjust its business so that it can thrive in a post-mainframe world , and all its other major investments — things like the former Poqet Computer Corp and HAL Computers Inc still in the development stage and demanding more capital , while its own core business is a victim of the mainframe malaise , Fujitsu Ltd 's 80% of ICL Plc begins to look the company 's most valuable asset , making it increasingly likely that the company will in due course want to float a lot more than the 25% it originally suggested on the London International Stock Exchange : Fujitsu 's biggest problem is the one now facing all big Japanese companies — that the days of cheap capital at home are gone with the bubble economy , probably forever , and many Japanese companies issued convertibles in the 1980s that are coming up to maturity ; with prices on the Tokyo exchange still bombed out , few holders are going to want to convert into shares , which means that issuers will have to raise expensive new capital on the international markets to redeem them .
9 Haughton-le-Skerne Ladies Guild is to hold a jumble sale on Saturday at 2pm in the church hall .
10 Haughton-le-Skerne Ladies Guild is to hold a jumble sale on Saturday at 2pm in the church hall .
11 The only ray of hope which the BDDA perceived in the report was Dr Eichholz 's call for " a close study of all methods of communication including phonetics linguistics , fingerspelling , finger-reading and gesture " , coupled with a recommendation that " fingerspelling ( the spelling and the reading of it ) should be taught in schools at least in the final period of school life . "
12 In some districts at least in the 1760s and 1770s , jenny spinners could earn as much as many weavers .
13 The early part of the band 's career witnessed incredible international success , making them undoubtedly the best known exponents of rockabilly in the world — no mean feat for three guys just out of their teens .
14 I was kind of like in the middle
15 Dorothea had told Florence Ames the story of Gaily in the church twice before , and neither of them was yet tired of it , Dorothea because it pleased her friend so to hear it , and Florence because it pleased her that the man had been somehow vindicated , turned out to be as good as she had thought , and a friend .
16 But the doctor discerned no more than the ghost of either in the Rector 's smile .
17 I 'M LOOKING FOR MALE AND FEMALE PENPALS from anywhere in the world .
18 In Cornwall and the Midland Valley of Scotland it has been upgraded to a new digital standard , developed with Bergen University , which permits telephone access to sensors in these areas from anywhere in the United Kingdom or overseas .
19 Over a third ( 38% ) of visitors came from in or near Edinburgh , but those from parts of Scotland outside the Edinburgh area ( 19% ) were outnumbered by visitors from elsewhere in the UK ( 27% ) , and were only slightly more numerous than those from overseas ( 16% ) .
20 Beamish was a vice-president of this organization and spoke at several of its meetings on his infrequent visits from abroad in the 1930s .
21 The population of Greater London grew by 2 million between the wars , 1.25 million by inward migration from elsewhere in the country and 0.75 million by natural increase .
22 Hateley was one of several players banned from Ibrox until yesterday in the wake of last Saturday 's defeat from Celtic that brought to an end Rangers ' run of 44 games without loss .
23 This radical treatment ( radical at least in the UK — it has distinct echoes of the accounting used in the old centrally-planned economies of Eastern Europe ) is a result of grafting on depreciation accounting ( and including the depreciation in prices ) to a cash accounting system .
24 From the United States came reports of the battles on campus and in the south , and writers like jazz critic and Village Voice columnist Nat Hentoff ; from London came a critique of Wilson 's first stumbling days of power , a concern with the new politics of ecology , the black movement , Vietnam , Algeria , Cuba by then in the sixth year of revolutionary rule — the seizure of Burroughs 's The Naked Lunch by the Director of Public Prosecutions , R. D. Laing on ‘ Violence Masquerading as Love ’ , the campaign to legalize marijuana .
25 The bulge was taking place about midway in the plaster wall .
26 I think there 's a need or the County Council considered there 's a need for certainly in the Greater York context , for further guidance to be given to fairly erm assess where the new settlement location er should be .
27 Is my right hon. Friend aware that in Ayrshire we are extremely proud of the new hospital which was built from start to finish within five years , a record for anywhere in the country ?
28 I mean you 're you 're not sort of right in the centre of town , but
29 No and you see it 's just them two I think they could put him sort of like in the hall and if there 's a
30 I have n't seen any primroses sort of like in the hedges yet
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