Example sentences of "[det] [adv] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 He sees that conflict between various elements in highly developed society can be creative , but that eventually deterioration will follow if connections are not preserved between the various areas of life which , in the primitive model , are integrated .
2 Is there some secret You inside that rather activist exterior ? ’
3 On that rather complacement note matters rested until 1958 , the year in which A. W. Phillips of the London School of Economics published a paper which proved to be a landmark in the evolution of macroeconomic ideas .
4 ( Or is that merely rhetoric ? )
5 As the Getty Museum knows , no matter how much money you have , it is n't enough , and what better way to get some extra bucks to make that down payment on that Titian than deaccession ?
6 just take that down glass bowl was there and that tea pot underneath .
7 The wheel advanced , or ‘ escaped ’ , by the space of one tooth for each to-and-fro oscillation of the foliot .
8 This is the first hint that we get that perhaps Piggy is a more mature and sensible boy than Ralph .
9 Nevertheless , the door was locked , the window casement shut , and Cranston proved to his own satisfaction , as well as his wife 's , that perhaps age had not yet drained the juices of his body .
10 As Gillespie remarks , even in Edinburgh , the craft unions were able to see to it that only union men worked Linotypes , and " by the end of the century , it was generally agreed that the effect of machines on employment had not been so bad as feared " .
11 That er lived in this house and they were the the real grass roots of the old Labour Party , the real socialists , not like the ones that we know today that only pay lip service to it .
12 What the NEA and Frohnmayer 's troubles have made clear is that only leadership , intelligent , proud and committed , can explain to the American people what great art , validated by time and genius , can bring to heal a split society .
13 She had tried to pretend that only discretion was holding him back .
14 that only knowledge or skills ( such as language skills ) of national relevance are worth testing ;
15 However , until very recently the accepted wisdom ( CRC , 1977a ) has been that only manufacturing jobs can provide the sort of economic basis needed for sustained job provision , and that neither hill farming or forestry , as shown in Table 5.10 , or service employment and tourism could provide a long-term solution to rural employment problems .
16 All the forceful tact Aunt Tossie possessed was needed to convince Dada that only champagne , the best champagne , would be appropriate to the occasion , and then to compel him into the stony depths of the cellars to root with Twomey along the half-empty bins where forgotten treasures spoiled .
17 That only cost sixty pound , I said only , well it 's better than a hundred pounds she said .
18 First , consider mutations that only affect adult survival ( ) .
19 An alternative to having a separate entry for every word-form is that only base forms are listed in the lexicon , together with a set of lexical rules for deriving all regularly inflected forms of the base item , and a listing of all irregularly inflected forms .
20 Priced at £4.95 a bottle which when diluted equals 82p per usable litre , AirX is claimed to be good value , say the manufacturers , when compared to spending money on products that only mask smells .
21 Work itself with its complicated fluctuation of task was seen as too complicated for a worker to understand and the belief was that only management could do so .
22 Roger O'Doherty , secretary of Age Concern in Derry , said : ‘ We wish it to be known that only evening activities are curtailed at present in the Whyte House .
23 The character table shows us that only e' and a 2 " vibrations , corresponding to dipole changes in the x/y and z directions , respectively , can be IR active , so we expect five fundamental bands in the IR spectrum of PF 5 .
24 She said that only time would tell , but the kidney appeared to be a good match .
25 The only requirements are that cardboard boxes are flattened before being placed into cages and that only cardboard is deposited , unless otherwise specified . ’
26 The radical implications of this assertion can be gleaned from an observation of Montaigne 's : ‘ We may easily discern , that only custom makes that seem impossible unto us , which is not so ’ ( Essays , trans .
27 I must stress that only aluminium cans are acceptable and , if possible , they should be crushed as they take up less room .
28 Credit Data told us that their policy was that only information about people under the same name should be passed where there was any possibility of multiple occupancy at a given address , but we felt that at least at the time of our visit this policy might not be clearly understood by the operators themselves , who might give information about people with other names at the given address , too .
29 The second principle is that only information which is known to be reasonably accurate and which is capable of being maintained in a reasonably accurate state should be stored within the system .
30 As he set off for the airport Lewis remembered that he had told Adam from the first that only trouble could come from a person of his youth and inexperience inheriting a big house and land of the dimensions of Wyvis Hall .
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