Example sentences of "new [noun] [prep] [noun sg] [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | If the layer thins by even one per cent , the result could be 15,000 new cases of cancer annually in the US alone . |
2 | Vigilance must be kept for possible new cases of tuberculosis both in immigrants and in the indigenous population . |
3 | But they started him on a new course of treatment yesterday and he 's begun to respond . ’ |
4 | The government thus gained a new foothold on power relatively painlessly , apart perhaps from the consultations between Denis Healey and the Liberals ' economic spokesman , John Pardoe , two combustible personalities whose stormy meetings ( or shouting matches ) provided amusement and entertainment throughout Whitehall . |
5 | This was the stimulus for a new wave of conflict primarily concerned with union recognition and the right to belong to a union . |
6 | Like the Carthusians she needed help to wed the old and new forms of spirituality so that her new contemplative vocation was not a painful dislocation from the past . |
7 | The proposal was evidently servicing a deficit model of education , which diagnosed that something was wrong with teachers which industry could put right : this at a time when education was faced by changes of revolutionary proportions , new content through curriculum reform required by the Education Reform Act and GCSE , new models of learning , new forms of assessment e.g. Records of Achievement ; new organisations e.g. tertiary colleges ; new accountability , newly appointed parent and industrial governors , new professionalism through initial teacher education , and training reforms for employment training . |
8 | As the ice retreated the northlands again became tenable , and some 6000 years ago coastal populations from northeastern Siberia spearheaded new waves of immigration eastward . |
9 | It said UN military observers helped after it collapsed in a dispute over control of the local police , prompting new fighting for territory yesterday between the former allies . |
10 | The new methods of production now emerging required an educated labour force , who participated consciously in the process of production rather than playing the role of brute labour . |
11 | I often used to wonder whether we should carry these new springs of happiness away with us when we emerged . |
12 | Perhaps the most obvious illustration of the extent to which trade was forcing itself upon the often unwilling attention of traditional diplomacy was the creation of a new type of diplomat most clearly typified by the commercial attaché . |
13 | His promotion through the army ranks had been rapid and by 350 he commanded a select corps of Ioviani and Herculiani , the new type of legion earlier created by Diocletian . |
14 | One of the results of the quantitative increase in material culture , providing new domains of representation all working in particular ways , is to complicate further the problem of what may be termed material ideology . |
15 | He borrowed nothing from it or any other local text , but introduced a new routine of life almost exclusively dependent on the latest developments at Cluny . |
16 | On that day , various poptastic things happened all over the world , all to convince you that AIDS is a terrible thing , that safe sex does n't mean no sex and that we must all love one another and usher in a new era of positivity etc etc . |
17 | He hopes the new local government system may bring a new era of co-operation rather than confrontation . |
18 | By stating that he rarely went to the theatre , and needed to be forcibly taken there if he went at all , he managed to lay bare the inadequacies of modern drama and defined the conditions of a new sort of drama altogether . |
19 | Indeed , " the main theme " of the book is the argument that the triangular pattern of cooperation between government and the two sides of industry built up a new form of harmony which lasted until the mid-sixties and led to the trade unions and employers ' associations being elevated to a new sort of status so that they became " governing institutions " sharing some of the political power and attributes of the state itself . |
20 | The draft document on declaring the party independent says this would not mean breaking off relations with the Soviet party , but would establish a new relationship of partnership instead of subordin-ation . |
21 | Braque had stated the new concept of form more consciously in the Baigneuse or Nu of early 1908 , where the unnaturally squat proportions of the figure are further exaggerated by the inclusion of certain aspects of it not visible from a single point of view . |
22 | In actual fact ‘ it was to find its full interpretation in a new concept of matter no longer made of immutable atoms but by relatively impermanent associations of a few fundamental particles , themselves liable to change and transformation ’ . |
23 | Two women , Gillian Shephard and Virginia Bottomley , have been promoted to the cabinet , in order to put an end to previous criticism of insensitivity and new fears of tokenism simultaneously . |
24 | Needs on occasion are identified which call for a sharp break with previous practice , or for a new genus of weapon altogether ( such as the ICBM , Galosh ABM , particle beam weapons ) . |
25 | She told him about Paris and her new assignment for Focus Now . |
26 | This suffering may be associated with rapidly changing configurations of personality , being a new person one day , and sinking back into the old self on the next , only to find that some minor episode puts the new organisation of self again in a position of regnancy . |
27 | THE 15-week ambulance dispute moved into a new area of confrontation yesterday as non-emergency workers in Surrey were threatened with the sack unless they returned to normal working in the new year . |
28 | ‘ I normally try to avoid having two new people on duty simultaneously , ’ he said . |
29 | What makes the new round of work potentially so profitable is the scope it offers for experiment . |
30 | But new means of production systematically embodied a higher degree of mechanization than their predecessors ( chapter 8 ) . |