Example sentences of "[num] is [adv] [verb] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 The expression of Oct-1 is generally regarded as ubiquitous and our results agree with this , although the relative amount of product appears to vary slightly between RNA samples ( Figure 4a ) .
2 The new technology referred to in section 2 is fully utilised and available from the beginning of Council Tax .
3 And the M-Five is also described as slow-moving .
4 The cable television industry is said to be leery of handing over a standard to a third party such as Microsoft Corp , which has teamed up with Intel Corp to develop a set-top control box based on the 80386 and Windows ; the 80386 is also regarded as underpowered for graphics work .
5 Our pH 16 values are normally 5 to 9 ; I look upon anything above pH 11½ to be bad — that 's from my experience in the laboratory that to get to a pH of 11 is easily done but to get to a pH of 12 you need a dam sight more alkali .
6 The northbound carriageway between junctions nine and ten is still blocked and we 're told it 's likely to remain blocked for the next two hours .
7 Invaluable time-saver for analogue design , Rescalc release 2.0 is much improved and pays for itself within hours , says Ben Duncan
8 The simple random sampling scheme described in Chapter 1 is widely used and forms the basis of more sophisticated procedures that are particularly needed in the social sciences and medicine .
9 Your 110 is high geared because the gearbox has been replaced with a Range Rover unit at some point .
10 For example , an increase of approximately 100 per cent in vehicle mileage by 2025 is widely acknowledged as likely to be responsible for huge increases in energy consumption and pollution , yet the Department of Transport " is n't interested in energy efficiency " .
11 Reith 's domination of the BBC as first Director-General ( i.e. chief executive ) until 1937 is well described as ‘ massive , totalitarian and idiosyncratic , and for many decades the traditions of the BBC seemed to flow directly from his personality ’ ( Curran and Seaton , 1988 , p. 118 ) .
12 The return to ‘ free markets ’ by 1955 is generally viewed as permissive in the sense that it resulted from the removal of the remainder of war and postwar restrictions .
13 IT DIDN'T. 1988 is widely perceived as Reading 's nadir , poorly attended and with a woefully average line-up , even by Reading 's by now hopeless standards .
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