Example sentences of "[conj] [conj] [verb] in [art] " in BNC.
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1 | on the streets , he has to react or or react in a manner that erm really when he 's on there , he does n't he does n't react to that particular incident that 's happening in front of him . |
2 | The reading undertaken while under stress — while waiting for the dentist , for example , or while sitting in a plane during turbulence , or when fatigued at the end of the day — is usually of this order . |
3 | The children performed these tasks either silently or while engaging in a task designed to suppress their vocalisation of the word names . |
4 | A gamble or a bet or wager was a way of life to the men of the village , and often a wager would be made at work or whilst drinking in the local . |
5 | But they see policy-level bureaucrats as either directly controlled by an external business elite or as acting in an implicitly biased way to defend the social interests of people with similar backgrounds , incomes and interests to themselves . |
6 | Because of maintaining an apparently different brand of theism , Hinduism is often viewed by those whose main contact is with the Near Eastern religions either as atheist or as believing in a different god or gods . |
7 | Practical experience is gained during the week end exercises or as shown in the photograph , when bridge building in Edinburgh . |
8 | These apparent exceptions can be justified as involving the exercise of a legal right , in the case of chastisement or correction , or as needed in the public interest , in the other cases . |
9 | They will also clarify whether such difficulties are best seen as an exaggerated form of more normal occurrences , or as arising in a different way from the mistakes made by normal people . |
10 | In addition , loss of acuity of the senses — particularly impaired sight and hearing — will reduce an elderly person 's awareness of danger , for example when crossing roads or when cooking in the kitchen . |
11 | Later you can do the same thing when walking along or when sitting in a car ( but only if you are the passenger please — do n't try it while driving ! ) |
12 | As the house will know , following discussions in Brussels , political agreement has been reached in the council on the amendment draft directive which , if implemented in its present form , would impose on auditors a slightly wider duty to report than that contained in the regulations we 're currently debating . |
13 | In a pond goldfish will grow considerably larger than if kept in an indoor aquarium . |
14 | The truth is that while batting in the indoor nets he was struck on the toe by a ball from paceman Chris Lewis and an X-ray over the weekend revealed he had indeed suffered a cracked bone . |
15 | Suppose that while shopping in a crowded store I become temporarily separated from a friend and in reply to his anxious call shout back " I am here " . |
16 | Light entering the sea penetrates at most to a depth of 1000 metres — and since the oceans have an average depth of 4000 m , this means that they are mostly dark , except when lit in the depths by bioluminescence ( see p.53 ) . |
17 | You tend to find that you become accustomed to the timing on your local water and that when sailing in a different place it takes a while to learn the timing of a different wave pattern . |
18 | They will include : ( i ) modification of share rights ; ( ii ) acquisitions or disposals of shares or substantial parts of the business or its assets ; ( iii ) changes in the Memorandum or Articles of Association ; ( iv ) changes to the auditors , bankers , or the accounting reference date ; ( v ) resolutions to wind up the company ( or a subsidiary ) ; ( vi ) payment of dividends or other distributions other than as provided in the Articles of Association ; ( vii ) changes in issued or authorised share capital ; ( viii ) contracts or arrangements by the company with any of the directors ; ( ix ) changes in borrowing powers ; ( x ) changes to the nature of the business ; ( xi ) guarantees or indemnities provided by the company ; ( xii ) limits on capital expenditure ; ( xiii ) creation of mortgages or charges over any of the company 's assets . |
19 | He was never more present than in this act ; never more comprehending of himself than when buried in the other sex . |
20 | finally , local councils were to be formed for each former borough , urban district or parish council area in the new unitary authorities , and where wanted in the metropolitan areas . |
21 | There is quite a marked contrast between this view of comity analysis and that developed in the amicus brief of the United States . |
22 | Now , as Government Circulars from the hand of Ellen Wilkinson and John Maud insisted , it had to be provided for everybody — and that meant in the new secondary modern schools . |
23 | The striking resemblance between this type of mutual support and that occurring in the human species accounts for much of the fascination of the chimpanzee for man . |
24 | The earliest recorded clocks , such as the St Alban 's clock and that erected in the Palace Chapel of the Visconti in Milan in 1335 , struck up to twenty-four . |
25 | The Semtex can be compared with fragments from those incidents and that found in the bomb factory at Clapham , south London , last December . |
26 | Throughout the work , Simmel is concerned with the relationship between the degree of abstraction here found in human relations , and that found in the emergence of modern scientific enterprise and modes of thought . |
27 | If there is little generalization of the new response to the test stimuli , we may conclude that the stimulus used in acquisition and that used in the test are readily discriminated . |
28 | … basic assumptions and beliefs that are shared by members of an organisation , that operate unconsciously , and that define in a basic ‘ taken-for-granted ’ fashion an organization 's view of itself and its environment . |
29 | Two important distinctions are made : first , between care provided in the carer 's home and that provided in the client 's home ; and second , between substitute care , in which the ‘ normal ’ carer ( or the local authority ) is replaced , and supplementary care , where the paid carer supplements the care of others or the client 's capacity for self-care . |
30 | Sceptical doubts about objectivity make good sense within a practice ; there are objectively correct answers to questions how to go on , and if challenged in a particular case , we can support our choice by appeal to the rule ( 'Why did you write 20,002 ? ’ 'Because you told me to go on adding 2' ) . |