Example sentences of "[to-vb] [adv prt] new " in BNC.

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1 In any other sphere of life , when the demand for your product collapses for reasons entirely beyond your control , you do n't try to drum up new custom , you wind the business down and go into something more profitable ’ ‘ But there is a disturbing feeling about that something irreversible may be happening in the world and it is not to Britain 's advantage .
2 There are some cracking discount deals around at the moment as lenders attempt to drum up new business , but watch out as the headline interest rate does n't always tell the whole story .
3 This gives each musician time to practise so that you all arrive at the rehearsal ready to try out new , revised musical parts .
4 He inspired the Prince , worked alongside him , coached him in the ways of business , schooled him in the art of responsible land management , encouraged him to try out new ideas , and helped turn the Duchy from a non-profit making concern into one that five years later had made net profits of £1.46 million .
5 As you slowly lose weight you can programme little rewards for yourself , like a visit to the hairdresser for a restyle , new make-up , new glasses , a tour of the clothes shops to try out new styles , and so on .
6 The headmistress and some of her staff co-operate in a local Science project , an association of some twenty schools which meets regularly to try out new ideas and share experiences .
7 In both subjects I am told that more time and more help is needed to spread the ideas , to run courses , to try out new approaches in different situations , to evaluate the success of the last step before embarking on the next , but the curriculum workers I met were disturbed that they were unable to provide what they knew teachers needed .
8 First , there 's the chance to try out new gear from a host of different exhibitors , and second , the opportunity to experience live , at no extra cost , some top players in the Capital Radio Live Music Hall .
9 All the courses have been tested by Deputy Commissioning Editor Elizabeth Keevill , who says : ‘ They 're fun and informative and you 'll come away with the confidence to try out new skills . ’
10 THE DIFFERENCE between regular country acts and their rock 'n' roll equivalents is that your NME -friendly guitar-basher enjoys and is expected to try out new riffs , to be playful and weird .
11 You do n't have to try out new , risky things in the classroom .
12 Project English gives the experienced and confident teacher maximum scope while providing a clear and supportive framework for the less experienced teacher to try out new techniques .
13 I think instead of encouraging you to try out new ideas they seem to get some kind of kick out of telling you how bad it is …
14 Traditional societies are run by traditionally-minded individuals , typically those who are inward-looking , not prepared to innovate and influenced by magic and religion ; while modern societies are run by modern-minded individuals , outward-looking , keen to try out new things , influenced by rational thought and practical experience .
15 Starting after Easter , the ten-week course at the Nevilles Cross Centre and Darlington Teachers ' Centre gives adults a chance to try out new ways of learning maths .
16 The British Government is eager to try out new methods for dealing with remand prisoners .
17 In January , too , the leading figures of the Conservative party met at Selsdon in order to hammer out new policies .
18 comes out , comes out at New Year 's Day , I was at home then and it erm going to come back New Year 's Day
19 Above all , patience is needed to work out new situations and relationships , in a family which has no shared past .
20 During the selection of delegates to the 28th Congress of the CPSU , these party clubs began to work out new , more democratic statutes for the CPSU that rejected the principle of democratic centralism .
21 Such species , says Dawkins , were less likely to go extinct than smaller species , or were more likely to split off new , larger species like themselves .
22 We will work with the legal profession to open up new opportunities to women and to black and ethnic minority groups , and create an independent judicial appointments commission .
23 But perhaps the most worrying , if most ephemeral , comment is that researchers are unwilling to take risks to open up new lines of research ; they tend to stick to piecemeal additions to well-established paths .
24 Scientists and engineers can apply for long term funding to open up new research directions
25 Because tin lodes are apt to end at any time , miners have to be continually ready to open up new levels or drives , and to extend new ones in a series of crazy changes in direction .
26 In his search he was aided by a number of new roads which the Mexican government has been building in this area to open up new regions to cultivation .
27 One obvious way to reduce the risks of conflict between the powers was to encourage the formation of an ‘ ultra-imperialist ’ consortium of powers to open up new territories like China .
28 NOWADAYS , CABARET Voltaire are n't drastically trying to open up new vistas. they just run the gamut of electronic dance music — techno , acid , ambient , the trancey bass-driven hypno-grooves — letting themselves be influenced by the most exciting period dance music has seen since ‘ 87 –'88.;
29 The company plans to carry on with all its publishing operations and to open up new lines of activity .
30 Unlike Unipart , BP already had a presence in most of the Eastern European countries and the former Soviet Union ( FSU ) and was well placed to open up new markets previously restricted behind an iron curtain .
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