Example sentences of "living [adv] [prep] [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | ( 3 ) In other words , although farm modernisation policies have actively encouraged non-viable or older farmers to retire from farming , many in the poorer areas have not done so , living on in a traditional way for extremely low returns . |
2 | Did she die — or is she , too , still living somewhere under an assumed name ? ’ |
3 | I asked whether they did not find it inconvenient , living so near the French border , not to speak French , but they said not . |
4 | Ecosystem was a term proposed by the plant ecologist A.G. Tansley in 1935 as a general term for both the biome which was ‘ the whole complex of organisms — both animals and plants — naturally living together as a sociological unit ’ and for its habitat . |
5 | I feel sorry only for Eugenie and Beatrice because they will suffer a great deal seeing their mother and father not living together under the same roof . ’ |
6 | The band , forced to play covers of Beatles songs and American country music ( the staple diet of Rhodesian radio ) , immediately switched to traditional African songs written specifically about celebrating freedom and living together in a new country . |
7 | There is also some evidence that couples are living together in a stable relationship without being married , having a child , and then getting married later . |
8 | For example , the ‘ village community ’ can signify nothing more than a type of settlement — a small number of people living together in a rural location usually in a nucleated pattern . |
9 | Was there not , on the whole of Battersea Reach , a couple , married or unmarried , living together in the ordinary way ? |
10 | How sad it is when a believer in his forties or fifties is merely an absentee landlord , living idly off the intellectual rent from the thinking of his student days ! |
11 | ‘ What was once a one mile journey into Garrison for someone living just on the other side of the border became a 26 mile round trip . |
12 | Between 1919 and 1923 about 700,000 Germans living just inside the Polish border , in Poznania and the Corridor were forced to abandon their homes and trek west into the Reich . |
13 | Many farm workers recognize this as an unavoidable aspect of living away from the main centres of industry , and while they may occasionally recognize the limitations which are imposed upon their freedom to choose both employment and housing , they are not necessarily embittered by it . |
14 | The purpose of this exercise , verbally repeated in funeral orations , was to instil in the young the duty of living up to the glorious achievements of their forefathers . |
15 | The strain of living up to the lofty concept of marriage that they have invented is tiring , at times , and she is a busy woman . |
16 | What evidence is there that you are not living up to the appropriate standards ? |
17 | Several schools commented on the importance of involving the whole school in living up to the agreed health policy . |
18 | Tutor Viv Shelley will look at whether manufacturing industries are living up to the green images they promote , the adequacy of monitoring processes and ask what responsibility lies with the public . |
19 | LIVING UP TO THE MACHO IMAGE |
20 | He also urged them to remember Tory supporters living overseas at the next election . |
21 | We 're still married but living apart in the same house , if you see what I mean . |
22 | Those who live in cold climates require high-calorie diets , but only if they are living actively in the open air ; sedentary indoor workers need no more than their counterparts in temperate latitudes . |
23 | We are thrilled that she is living happily with a sweet Jack Russell Terrier , several cats , rabbits , and even a horse ! |