Example sentences of "[adj] [v-ing] the " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Karlinsky sipped water and waited while the people looked around , each encouraging the other to ask a question . |
2 | She felt guilty accepting the money , but took it gratefully . |
3 | Fullness of joy comes from entering into fellowship with the Father and the Son , through the Holy Spirit , each enjoying the company of the other . |
4 | They laughed again , each enjoying the joke , but each with the watchfulness of his profession . |
5 | This profile of the ‘ new wave ’ heroin user is clearly different from that characterising the ‘ first wave ’ of heroin users in the late 1 960s and early 1970s . |
6 | Another distinct possibility is that , although annual incidence appears to be declining , it may stabilise at a far higher endemic level than that characterising the population prior to the ‘ epidemic ’ in 1979 . |
7 | He had this odd idea , you see , that helping the police was what it was all about . |
8 | What we need to do now is make them look interesting and we do that using the what is called formatting options . |
9 | We can see , therefore , that using the business accounting model ( No. 1 and No. 2 ) , the opening capital position was maintained . |
10 | The alternative way of pricing the TB is to substitute this yield into the present value formula ( 4.7 ) to give exactly the same issue price ( 97.51 ) as that using the discount rate formula ( 4.9 ) . |
11 | Well that 's a picture you build up by doing things like appraisals , assessments , things like that using the other skills . |
12 | The board can then be exposed and processed as normal using the techniques described in previous months . |
13 | Resolve damage as normal using the ‘ To Wound ’ chart . |
14 | It is as though these translators were each construing the poem by supplying a vocabulary reflecting a personal perception of the poet 's intention — or perhaps in some cases caught from other translators . |
15 | I have known couples take pride in one another 's tawdry behaviour : each pursuing the other 's folly , the other 's vanity , the other 's weakness . |
16 | This boycott had begun on Jan. 18 after an altercation between an employee of one of the shops and a Haitian woman customer , which had resulted in each accusing the other of assault and racial insults . |
17 | Various voices , each using the same melodic outline . |
18 | Modern engineers have demonstrated , at least on paper , construction techniques that would certainly have been possible using the equipment available to Neolithic and later cultures . |
19 | She was asked to draw on her knowledge of the subject 's life material and reply to each question , supplying evidence , as nearly as possible using the subject 's own words , that was sufficiently detailed for the answer to be evaluated properly against the original SADS-L criteria . |
20 | The rear of the Toyota was only just clear of the water as I jumped out , checking to see if it would be possible using the low gear to push the rock over the edge . |
21 | A more general treatment in which path lengths and directions may take any values is possible using the method of Markoff . |
22 | Provenance studies of sandstone sequences are possible using the modal composition plus maturity indicators ( Fig. 5.10 ; Table 5.5 ) ( Valloni & maynard , 1981 ; Dickinson , 1985 ; Valloni , 1985 ) . |
23 | Two screendumps supplied — show the soft of colour quality possible using the Magician card . |
24 | 4.2 From January 1990 , new book acquisitions have been catalogued on a compute database which allows more extensive search facilities than is possible using the card indexes ; eg. truncated word search on title or series title , and using boolean operators to join search terms . |
25 | Programmable movements on a given slide are possible using the Olympus microscope controller with appropriate software . |
26 | Using partial equilibrium analysis , and assuming that a non-member country is considering participation in an existing CU , an evaluation of the welfare effects is possible using the traditional concepts of producer and consumer surplus . |
27 | Clerical workers averaged forty-five hours per week , while retail workers averaged fifty-five reflecting the extremely long working week of many shop assistants . |
28 | the complexity of corporate structures , which often consist of so many subsidiaries and specialized divisions , within and beyond national boundaries , that unknotting the tangled thread of responsibility becomes difficult , if not impossible , thus making the view that ‘ no one was to blame ’ easy to accept ; |
29 | Having regard to the true construction of section 9 of the Act , the House concluded that the refusal of the council to make a refund was not in accordance with the statutory intention and so affirmed the decision of the Court of Appeal [ 1987 ] 1 W.L.R. 593 allowing the taxpayers ' claim for judicial review of the decision . |
30 | The women were interviewed in early 1971 using the interview schedule reproduced in Appendix II ; the interviews were tape-recorded and lasted on average about two hours . |