Example sentences of "[conj] [adj] [vb pp] [adv prt] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | The Tories have more or less run out of good ideas which inspired them in the early Thatcher years , and are left only with a few bad ones : the creation of new , ever more incompetent ‘ private ’ monopolies ; the vindictive pursuit of aged war criminals ; the idiotic struggle to knock a penny off income tax , which will benefit nobody , when so much more could be achieved with a little imagination — by abolishing all discriminatory rates , abolishing capital transfer tax and other taxes on savings , allowing domestic wages ( as all other forms of employment are allowed ) against personal taxation … |
2 | Says Jim Whiston , ‘ This time next year we 'll have double the number of accreditations and by 1990 the vast majority of businesses in C&P , ICI Films and ICI Advanced Materials will have attained BS standards or those laid down by manufacturers . ’ |
3 | He explained that there were a limited number of places , with sixteen or seventeen taken up for September already ( I wondered whether this meant Balbinder might be unlucky , but did not like to ask ) . |
4 | You get the same piece of pizza whether it 's two shared out between six , four shared out between twelve or one shared out between three or twenty four shared out between a lot of people . |
5 | And there would be always a beast or two cut up for to be given to the village . |
6 | I had few friends , just one or two left over from school , but on the infrequent occasions when we met I could see from their faces that they pitied me , finding me foolish and Syl a bore . |
7 | I felt that this was possibly a chap I should look at — quite apart from the fact that I knew little of him except that he had somehow or other got out of Holland and become the ADC to Queen Wilhelmina at the Dutch headquarters in London . |
8 | However the example I have chosen of the stylistics of manner should make clear the potential difference between the two approaches , and at the same time illustrate the use of a more technically advanced linguistics than that drawn on by Spitzer , who like Auerbach belonged to the European philological tradition more than to the modern tradition of linguistics . |
9 | Although these turned out to be insubstantial , for a while they created concern from a security point of view . |
10 | Of course this was about 1965 , and things have obviously changed , but there has been no kind of ‘ vintage ’ guitar market in Australia — except those bought in from America … |
11 | Fonts created from outline masters should be better quality than those built up as bitmaps . |
12 | Stories simply handed down by word of mouth over that length of time are likely to be less accurate than those written down from the beginning . |
13 | The sums involved in the Sagawa scandal were vastly greater than those paid out during the Recruit Cosmos case . |
14 | Some second-tier agencies have adopted a kind of ratings machismo that promises investors harsher verdicts than those handed down by Moody 's and S&P . |
15 | Whatever the economic benefit , the political repercussions of steps such as de-collectivisation would be far more unsettling than those brought about by the limited de-Stalinisation of the 1950s . |
16 | Am I right in erm my belief that in fact the the final version of policy H two erm need not and should not include a list of criteria other than those set out in P P G two paragraph thirty three . |
17 | Oh no , not that both listened in at the time . |
18 | Fierce local loyalties and rivalries were the life-blood of the amateur football leagues just as they had been in parish recreations a century before , and this carried over into commercial spectator sport , which offered a new kind of community life and identity . |
19 | So the encampment and the monastic township was scoured for foodstuffs and provisioning for the besieged — unfortunately no powder and ball was found — and this loaded on to horses . |
20 | And these because you always wanted to be able to adapt rooms for different purposes and this folded back against the wall . |
21 | Then once this morning Fred 's bum was on his blanket and Windy curled up by the side of him . |
22 | With most of 1962 and 1963 taken up with stage , television and film work , Crawford could reflect that his career was moving in the right direction . |
23 | In these respects , it can certainly be claimed that the polytechnics have by and large measured up to their original specification . |
24 | Another dead kid , and all dressed up in Mosse 's old clothes . |
25 | She 'd never seen so much silverware , and all laid out for one person . |
26 | That was a signal for the class to enter into the fun and one and all scrambled over to Mademoiselle . |
27 | The Sun had pages 1 , 2 , 4 , 5 , 15 , 16 , 17 and 18 given over to the story , while the others managed with only one or two pages fewer . |
28 | Now at last this has been achieved , first in Scotland by the Law Reform ( Parent and Child ) ( Scotland ) Act 1986 , and then in England and Wales by the Family Law Reform Act 1987 , with the result that in law there is now no distinction made between those born in and those born out of wedlock . |
29 | But there is a world of difference between these patients , discharged carefully to a community hostel , and those sent out at short notice after a few months in an acute psychiatric ward . |
30 | There are some significant differences however : the Tate magazine will be published by the architectural monograph publishers and publishers of Blueprint , Wordsearch , who will make the financial commitment to the project , aiming to sell a steep 25,000 copies each issue including the copies sent to the 8,000 Friends of the Tate and those bought in by the gallery ; the Royal Academy Magazine is published ‘ in-house ’ and supports itself through its advertising revenue , capitalising on the fact that it has a guaranteed audience of 67,000 Friends . |