Example sentences of "in [adj] [noun] [vb -s] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Two hundred and fifty pounds in used notes looks very like blackmail but , for these days , it 's a modest demand from a comparatively wealthy man . ’
2 In the Keynesian model , the price level is assumed to be inflexible so that the fall in aggregate demand has the effect of reducing real income to OY 1 with the price level remaining unchanged at OP .
3 Barro focused on the other major prediction of that model : that only the unpredictable movement in aggregate demand affects real variables such as output and unemployment — his contribution is discussed in section 6.2 .
4 There the random movement in aggregate demand leads to an unexpectedly high price and it is this which induces a rise in output .
5 Thus , in the Keynesian model , a fall in aggregate demand leads to a fall in real income and reduces employment .
6 By linking monetary policy to further lags in aggregate demand shocks one can establish a potential role for monetary policy even within Barro 's rational expectations framework .
7 His first appearance in surviving records appears to be late in 1249 , when he was appointed the abbot of Westminster 's attorney for litigation in the Common Bench .
8 In a direct reference to the West Belfast MP , the spokesman added : ‘ Dr Hendron may well recall that in recent months the RUC presence in loyalist areas has produced complaints of police harassment . ’
9 The escalation in loyalist terrorism presents an enormous problem for the police .
10 When a series of such images , running vertically down a strip of film , is projected at 24 frames a second ( fps ) in the cinema , or 25 fps on ( British ) TV , an illusion of movement is created because of a retinal property known as ‘ persistence of vision ’ , which in normal life enables us to perceive the world as a continuous flow , not an infinite series of separate moments .
11 The violence here consists in the foregrounding of the phonic aspect of ordinary speech , which in normal communication remains subservient to the referential ‘ set ’ of utterances .
12 How can human beings in normal conversation makes sense of 5,000 words an hour of confusing , semi-organized information ?
13 Twelve hours as an average in normal times seems a fair measure .
14 Flores d'Arcais and Schreuder ( 1983 ) take the view that syntactic computation seems to take place automatically , but that the extent to which the results of such computations are used in normal comprehension depends on whether or not pragmatic or semantic cues are available to aid interpretation .
15 A complete molecular description of this process of programmed cell death initially proved to be elusive , but its central part in normal development has now been clearly established ; the phenomenon is recognized to be widespread in multicellular organisms , and underlies such processes as organogenesis , tissue homoeostasis and the ‘ editing ’ of the immune system to remove autoreactive clones .
16 Disinfection in normal practice presents a challenge to management .
17 Time spent outside this range for longer than the 90th percentile in normal subjects implies an abnormal pH exposure .
18 Since the tone of the internal anal sphincter is normally modulated by its sympathetic nerve supply , the observation that the minimum basal pressure is no lower in spinal patients than in normal subjects suggests persistance of a tonic sympathetic influence on the intenral anal sphincter , supporting previous studies , and probably mediated via autonomous activity of the inferior mesenteric ganglion .
19 Study of these various components of psychoticism as found in normal people has not been confined to the superficial level of observable traits , measured by questionnaires .
20 The effect of age on anorectal function in normal people has been investigated previously .
21 We are familiar with this in words like gnome , or Wednesday ; but we are n't always conscious that Saint Paul 's in normal speech sounds like Sn Paulz or that bread and butter sounds like bread n butta .
22 The relative share of the public sector ( central and local government plus the public corporations ) in total expenditure has increased in all of the industrialised economies this century .
23 Assuming that the contributions are made during the five years the child is at a fee-paying school the difference in total cost works out at £43,000 at an investment return of 13 per cent , compared with £58,320 at 8.5 per cent .
24 The lower productivity of peripheral units and the low proportion of wage costs in total costs means that the relatively cheap labour does not give the periphery a significant price advantage over more advanced units .
25 The decrease in total cGMP has been reported to be only 10–15% ( ref. 24 ) , but the decrease in free cGMP has not yet been measured .
26 Our ability to supply gas in outlying areas has been considerably improved in joint
27 Roadside reading at Monboddo in pleasant sunshine begins to provide answers to these questions .
28 The New Testament describes the presence and effects of prejudice , and in strong terms describes the way in which it can contribute to conflict .
29 High unemployment in rich countries seems set to be a permanent blight .
30 To alleviate the symptoms , about one in five diabetics in rich countries injects himself regularly with insulin .
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