Example sentences of "[verb] [vb pp] [verb] [art] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 cleani , co cos I got caught pulling a little girl 's pigtails .
2 They 're the side of Freud , that has tended to be ignored , even by the people you would 've expected to take the greatest notice of them .
3 and nineteen fifty so you would 've expected to see the same sort of increase .
4 Since then a strong movement has developed using the oral history/life story method to document the tragic experiences of the ordinary population over the last seventy years .
5 One of the Festival 's six major themes is that of ‘ Recreation and Sport ’ and the Scottish Sports Council through Actionsport Scotland has undertaken to organise a daily programme of sports activities .
6 But it does not follow that there may not be a difference in the procedures which are appropriate on the one hand in requiring the driver to provide a specimen of blood or urine under section 7(4) where it is obligatory for him to do so because one of the circumstances specified in section 7(3) has arisen , and on the other hand in informing the driver of his right under section 8(2) to claim that the specimen of breath which he has given containing the lower proportion of alcohol should be replaced by a specimen of blood or urine under section 7(4) .
7 He should be told that the specimen of breath which he has given containing the lower proportion of alcohol exceeds the statutory limit but does not exceed 50 microgrammes of alcohol in 100 millilitres of breath ; that in these circumstances he is entitled to claim to have this specimen replaced by a specimen of blood or urine if he wishes ; but that , if he does so , it will be for the constable to decide whether the replacement specimen is to be of blood or urine and that if the constable requires a specimen of blood it will be taken by a doctor unless the doctor considers that there are medical reasons for not taking blood , when urine may be given instead .
8 The driver is faced with the prospect of conviction on the basis of the breath specimen which he has given containing the lower proportion of alcohol .
9 During the same period , it has voted to change the Russian constitution — itself new — on roughly 50 occasions .
10 The time has come to take a closer look at that assumption .
11 The time has come to put the national interest above the special interest and totally eliminate political action committees .
12 For example , the period 1945–51 has come to acquire a retrospective glow which it may not altogether deserve .
13 Last week Lord Skelmersdale told the Lords that ‘ the government 's decision is that the time has come to implement the 1975 Act … . it is the large number of reservoirs for which no one appears to take responsibility which gives rise to the greatest concern , he added .
14 Byrne ( 1986 , p. 299 ) sees it as a constitutional change such that ‘ central government , in relation to local government has come to resemble the Big Brother of George Orwell 's Nineteen Eighty Four ’ , while Newton and Karran ( 1985 , ch. 8 ) compare it to ‘ Knee-Capping Local Government ’ .
15 Tonight the cellist Vedran Smailovic , who has come to represent the very soul of the besieged city , performs simultaneously with three other cellists in different capitals around the world .
16 In 1924 , though , Eliot has come to perceive The Golden Bough as a ‘ stupendous compendium of human superstition and folly ’ , seeing in it increasingly less ‘ interpretation ’ , so that it has become ‘ a statement of fact ’ which is not involved in the maintenance or fall of any theory of Frazer 's .
17 Gradually over the years the term has come to mean the minimum number of members who must be present if the meeting is to transact business .
18 Its own root is ‘ thought ’ , and from that it has come to mean the inner debate of a person who is reasoning with himself .
19 The life-is-a-party world of Xuxa has come to portray the official version of Brazilian reality , with its glossy blondes and creamy morenas — and very few blacks .
20 Thus , ‘ Congress has come to dominate the national politics of federalism , and its members have gained that dominance by crawling inside the details of federal grant programmes and examining the effects of the distribution of federal money ’ , instead of the states deciding it themselves .
21 ‘ The company has been a wonderful part of my life , but I feel the time has come to permit a younger generation to take the reins . ’
22 It has come to expect the steady increase in the standard of living that new developments in science and technology have brought to continue , but it also distrusts science because it does n't understand it .
23 Over this period an influential school of thought called monetarism has developed around his ideas and has come to challenge the Keynesian orthodoxy as the dominant academic influence over monetary policy .
24 Certain administrative changes at this time appear designed to effect a stricter supervision by the Exchequer over the collection of the Forest revenues , and to lessen the temptation to extortion by the Forest officers .
25 Shortly thereafter , KPMG will notify the party its client has selected to negotiate an executed purchase agreement .
26 For over five years , news from CCG has come under the banner What 's Cooking ? , but as the company has grown to include a wide range of other services as well as catering , we felt that title was no longer appropriate .
27 From a family firm with some 2,000 employees in 1966 , the group has grown to become a public company comprising nine factories employing around 6,000 people at home and overseas .
28 She has applied to do a nursing degree .
29 JETTAIR , the Liverpool company aiming to reestablish air links between the city and London , has applied to operate an extra route to Gatwick .
30 Now the Government has moved to tackle the growing problem with four hard-hitting TV advertisements , as part of a £1.4m crackdown on sniffers .
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