Example sentences of "[adj] [adv] [vb -s] [det] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Table 5.1. below gives some performance figures for the HWIM and RM1 lexical access components .
2 I do help if I can , but I also point out to them that the help is to members of the ( and I send them details and a membership application form — but this rarely has any effect ; I do n't even get an acknowledgment as a rule ) .
3 This effectively disallows any subject being discussed at an Apex conference .
4 This effectively allows any presentation graphics program on the Macintosh to talk to the professional film recorders such as the QCR and beyond by converting the PICT files generated on the Macintosh into the native language of the film recorder .
5 But this only raises another question : how do we know a specific presence when we see one ?
6 This obviously saves much time and effort as well as allowing for the creation of more imaginatively produced work .
7 This obviously places any nominee director in an invidious position .
8 Off-exchange perhaps means any transaction which is not on-exchange ( as defined ) and , if so , it includes transactions on an exchange which is not an RIE or DIE ; this result would be similar to the money market exemption in s 43 of the FSA , since that includes transactions on any exchange that is not an RIE .
9 The Act of 1985 only provides that residence must be ‘ with the tenant . ’
10 The FOND only covers those members present within that file , so , for example , if you had Helvetica and Helvetica Italic in the System but Helvetica Bold and Bold Italic in a Suitcase the latter two would not be found by the System .
11 Loud noise from passing vehicles is doubly unwelcome because , not only does it drown out the wanted sound , but it also causes the camcorder 's automatic gain control to lower the recording level ; this generally takes some seconds to return to normal after the disturbance , during which time the wanted sound is not recorded properly .
12 This usually means little pruning and , potentially even more serious , since large problems frequently have to be terminated before they have been completely solved to avoid excessive computation time , frontier search may provide no solution at all .
13 This usually causes such sites to have two accounts , one being the Captive LIFESPAN Manager , and the other being a less ( or non- ) privileged non-Captive LIFESPAN Administration Account .
14 A nurse who trains at the age of forty still has many years of valuable service ahead and many years of past experience to draw upon .
15 This also involves another change , in that socialist politics now increasingly involve many other social groups besides classes , such as those which are active in the ecology movement and the women 's movement ; as can be seen , for example , in the European Parliament where socialists and their allies in such movements now form an influential majority .
16 ‘ But this also raises some doubt over her control over the department in that a highly contentious initiative like this can apparently proceed without her knowing anything about it . ’
17 This also provides more power through the turn because the rig will be more upright .
18 This also provides some resistance to heat loss .
19 While altruism by one individual towards another clearly involves some self-sacrifice , the tacit ( even unconscious ) assumption by the donor is that such sacrifice will , in the long run , generate reciprocal support .
20 People can be expected to differ in their abilities and this inevitably gives some people a comparative advantage in processing information , making decisions , and communicating them to others .
21 This now covers all market deals in fully paid listed shares or loan stock .
22 However , it is doubtful whether this really has much effect , because in the tail-down position at such low speeds , the tail can not develop much , if any , down-load .
23 The House of Commons realizes that government must be carried on and this often mitigates any tendency to be disruptive .
24 This materially assists all G M B members and not simply those in the Process and Construction Section .
25 This immediately creates some problems , since " codes " for this purpose are social constructs , and do not necessarily coincide with what linguists would recognise as discrete languages .
26 This again implies some limitation on the quantitative measurement of style , for within the limited compass of a few hundred words , little statistical significance can be attached to the frequency of this or that feature .
27 Despite these outstandingly interesting and important findings , which support Galton and throw an entirely new light on the whole topic of intelligence , none of the contributors mentions the work of S. Lehrl and others in Germany , which demonstrates very high correlations between IQ tests and simple speed of naming of numbers and letters ; this too throws much doubt on the theories embraced in this book .
28 The second better suits such cases as the complete works of a given author , which might be regarded simultaneously as a single text in its own right and as a series of independent texts .
29 However , it is wrong to assume that s13 of SGA 1979 somehow converts all statements made as to description into contractual terms , and the recent case of Harlingdon Ltd v Hull Fine Art Ltd [ 1990 ] 1 All ER 737 confirms that the normal contractual principles as to incorporation of terms still subsist ( for example Dick Bentley Productions Ltd v Harold Smith ( Motors ) Ltd [ 1965 ] 1 WLR 623 ) .
30 Section 3 on this accused already has some enjoyment of the property ( e.g. he has possession ) or where the accused falls short of taking complete control at the moment of appropriation .
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