Example sentences of "[noun pl] normally [vb pp] " in BNC.

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1 The head of Lima 's anti-rabies clinic said the bats normally feasted on animals but , in their rabid state , they probably did n't know any better .
2 While in use on the Croydon system , these cars normally worked on the Thornton Heath — Purley service and like 46–55 were probably too large for the Penge or Addiscombe services .
3 Do not remove lower buds except for plants such as gooseberries normally grown on a ‘ leg ’ .
4 Our discussion here will consider the variables normally found important in second language learning , and consider how they might be used to predict BSL learning .
5 In conclusion , the ACE/DD genotype is a new potent risk factor for myocardial infarction in middle-aged men , particularly in subjects normally considered to be at low risk .
6 Partly because those who served in garrisons had to be ready to serve in the field when required ( for a castle acted as a base where soldiers could remain when not in the field , and from which they could control the countryside around by mounted raids within a radius of , say , a dozen miles ) , partly because of an increasing difficulty in securing active support from the nobility and gentry for the war in France , English armies at the end of the war sometimes included a greater ratio of archers to men-at-arms than ever before , sometimes 7:1 or even 10:1 , rather than the more usual 3:1 under Henry V and the parity of archers to men-at-arms normally found in the second half of the fourteenth century .
7 ‘ Building operations ’ , for instance , include rebuilding operations , structural alterations of , or additions to , buildings and , somewhat curiously , ‘ other operations normally undertaken by a person carrying on business as a builder ’ ; but maintenance and improvement works which affect only the interior of the building or which do not materially affect the external appearance of the building are specifically excluded .
8 This requires diagnostic skills normally associated with doctors , but it has long been suspected that this responsibility is generally left entirely to the DN , so this section begins with an analysis of DN responses to the question : ‘ Who decided on current treatment ? ’ before examining that treatment .
9 Comprising some 275 paintings , plus 150 works in other media including fifty découpages , thirty sculptures and a selection of drawings and illustrated books , it will occupy the entire first and second floors of the museum , temporarily displacing the permanent collection to the galleries normally used for loan exhibitions .
10 The activists ' message scrawled on a wall near the ground is some way removed from the burning passions normally aroused by football , while the T-shirts are more machismo than menace , and pop songs peppered with heavy breathing are apparently in vogue if not in keeping with pre-match entertainment .
11 Politically , the judicial conception of the public interest tends to embrace the promotion of certain views normally associated with the Conservative Party and there is a greater likelihood that Labour Governments will encounter challenges through the courts if only because they tend to be more interventionist and to challenge the status quo .
12 The range of values normally found for σ is from about 1.5 to 2.5 as shown in table 10.1 .
13 Within this secondary category are grouped all the engineering analysis activities normally performed using computers .
14 As this was an art movement which America embraced with unprecedented enthusiasm and unrivalled breadth of vision , and as we specialise so much in American art objects ( we showed at the Modernism Fair in New York last year ) , the theme has provided a vehicle to address the famously discriminating audience of Grosvenor House with objects normally found only in a handful of the most forward looking museums .
15 One needs to study the planning of the buildings , and sculptures and objects normally associated with religious ritual .
16 Like many readers , we were concerned that the paper-thin parade of models normally featured in magazines and newspapers are n't representative of women as a whole .
17 It incorporates all the functions normally expected in an electronic organiser , including diary , clock , alarm , notepad and address book .
18 Once every fifteen days , during the strong spring tides , areas normally immersed in water are briefly exposed to the air .
19 Alkali soluble soils : are organic soils normally found in heavy layers adhering to surfaces or which have been compacted or allowed to dry out and become hard .
20 Only very fine particles , those with diameters less than 0–2 mm , are carried in suspension by the winds normally found at the surface of the earth .
21 As a result , it is possible to see in such groups the collective responses normally associated with shopfloor workers .
22 This criterion is quite strict , and does not allow the grouping together of all senses normally considered to be metaphorically related .
23 Gardens normally surrounded village dwellings .
24 Mr de Klerk said Mr Mandela was fully aware of the proposed releases , lending substance to the belief that the world 's most famous political prisoner has played a decisive negotiating role with the government way beyond the political limitations normally placed on prisoners .
25 To keep Mr Nakayama , Mr Kaifu bought off the Abe faction by surrendering one of the two cabinet posts normally held by the small Komoto faction to which he himself belongs .
26 You may be able to get separate insurance but the companies we tried did n't want to know — and none of the companies normally used by vets to insure pets were prepared to cover fish .
27 It should be borne in mind that planning permissions normally run with the land .
28 To reflect this , the Consultative Paper proposed that such centres could be offered the opportunity to accept devolved responsibility for quality elements normally administered by SCOTVEC , provided that the internal quality systems in place were appropriate to each element for which devolved responsibility was being sought .
29 With rents normally frozen at an obsolete level , entry fines were either certain , or , if technically arbitrary at the will of the lord , required by custom to be reasonable , which amounted to much the same thing .
30 In the way it lays bare dark emotional rumblings normally concealed beneath the constraints of village life , Went the Day Well ? suggests Cavalcanti had learned as much from the Surrealists he worked with in Paris as from Britain 's documentarists .
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