Example sentences of "[art] [noun] [adv] [verb] [coord] " in BNC.

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1 The outdoor sand pit may include many of the activities already described and is dealt with more fully in chapter 9 Outdoor Activities .
2 The manager does not have the opportunity gregariously to share and sort out ideas with staff colleagues .
3 He makes an inventory of forms , but not of contexts in which the forms arise — this would be a very difficult task as the forms often overlap and can cause confusion to the learner .
4 The Direction also oversees and assists the so-called classes and controlés museums , that is the 1200 or so provincial museums either directly linked into the Ministry through their director or supervised in order to ensure that they comply with certain requirements ( see chart ) .
5 A recent Home Office survey concludes that there is no simple solution to the prevention of rape , other than ‘ the willingness both to question and to change the pattern of social life ’ .
6 The runner soon returns and we all shuffle soggily into the hut .
7 The approach was collaborative : teachers were invited to work with the team as equal partners in the attempts both to investigate and find solutions to the GIST problem .
8 You notice immediately that it is different from other parts of the country , because the roads are very narrow and windy and the hedges well built and in most cases so tall they are impossible to see over .
9 However each can learn something from the others , and it is thanks to International co-operation on this level that the RNLI began to operate the Waveney ( originally an American coastguard design ) , and that the Canadians now build and operate the Arun class .
10 On occasion there were more serious charges where preliminary hearings were held and the case either dismissed or passed on for trial at a higher court .
11 We praise God for the progress already made and ask for your prayers and support as we seek to make this project a reality .
12 ( The vet eventually amputated and Tulley became a different dog — getting about so much quicker . ) ;
13 and then it homes in on one of the men right and it goes sort of whee one hour later whee whee bom bom bom and the other one goes one hour later right and the computer just explodes and it just goes boom
14 Though the Young Vic 's small theatre-in-the-round is hardly the best place for a tense domestic drama , this tightly-controlled production keeps the dread steadily rising and nicely paces the outbursts of emotion against the background of rumbling resentment .
15 As they turned a corner on the path , the clerk suddenly stopped and grasped Ranulf by the arm .
16 This study seeks to build on the foundations thus laid and to take the assessment of the importance of the railway station a step further .
17 It may be extremely hard for your employer to justify a poor grading at assessment time when earlier in the year you received a letter from the chairman specifically thanking and praising you for your efforts .
18 It was denied again in Sir John Eliot 's Case ( 1629 ) 3 St Tr 294 , a decision which , however , the Houses never accepted and which , after objections in 1641 and 1667 , they eventually rejected in 1668 when the House of Lords reversed the decision of 1629 and held that there could be no proceedings in respect of words said in Parliament .
19 Immediately prior to the entry of the house the plans slightly changed and I was issued with the see shield and my shot gun was given to one of the other officers .
20 It filled you , with glory for a time , but the glory soon departed and then it left upon your spirit , oh , the most appalling ravages .
21 It is the hall mark of a contract of sale of goods that the parties enter into a mutual commitment that the buyer thereby acquires or shall acquire ownership of the goods .
22 If the seller can not maintain an action under section 49 , he may still have a claim for damages which he can bring under section 50 ‘ where the buyer wrongfully neglects or refuses to accept and pay for the goods . ’
23 ‘ ( 1 ) Where the buyer wrongfully neglects or refuses to accept and pay for the goods , the seller may maintain an action against him for damages for non-acceptance. ( 2 ) The measure of damages is the estimated loss directly and naturally resulting , in the ordinary course of events , from the buyer 's breach of contract .
24 Broadly , goods are in course of transit from the time that they are delivered to an independent middleman for the purpose of transmission to the buyer , until the time that the buyer actually obtains or is entitled to obtain possession .
25 The theory behind the sections is that , if an owner of goods agrees to sell them to someone and retains title but nevertheless lets the buyer have possession , that owner must bear the consequences ( i.e. loss of title ) if the buyer then sells and delivers the goods to an innocent sub-purchaser .
26 It is more orthodox in arrangement and pedestrian in style but the subject is well covered , the explanations clear and the illustrations well drawn and captioned .
27 All those in favour of the proposals please show and all those against .
28 These principles are fully consistent with paragraph 1374 of Archbold , Criminal Pleading , Evidence and Practice , 36th ed. ( 1966 ) and the cases there cited and paragraph 4–179 of the 41st ed. ( 1982 ) , which was written just before the publication in Practice Note ( Criminal Evidence : Unused Material ) [ 1982 ] 1 All E.R.
29 For the first time no thin rubber insulation had kept them ultimately apart , and Mr Berkley had found the experience oddly moving and disturbing .
30 The cheque never arrived and I heard nothing more !
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