Example sentences of "[verb] [adv prt] [prep] [adj] [noun] in " in BNC.

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1 These trays take four or six PP3s ( depending on the model of detector ) which push on to snap terminals in the bottom of the tray .
2 The extracellular matrix laid down by microbial cells in microbial biosensors will show a more random orientation of structural components , but these can also have a dominant influence on the flux of the product and the substrate .
3 Syrian troops allegedly crack down on pro-Iraqi demonstrators in eastern Syria .
4 We used to go along to various churches in the area playing music .
5 If the Conservatives are the largest single party , should he hang on as Prime Minister in the hope that he can do a deal with another party ?
6 The widest definition of the Crown in the cases is that of Lord Diplock in Town Investments Ltd. v. Department of Environment who said of the term that it is ‘ appropriate to embrace both collectively and individually all the Ministers of the Crown and parliamentary secretaries under whose direction the administrative work of government is carried on by civil servants in the various government departments ’ .
7 By concentrating on pebbles carried down from alpine sources in the beds of rivers and streams , full advantage could be taken of the erosive power of water in wearing away adhering rock and concentrating the sought after greenstone .
8 The USSR Supreme Soviet on Oct. 31 adopted legislation cracking down on black-market trading in the period of transition to a market economy .
9 Crusaders , who hammered Wakefield 30-0 in the first round , were never in front and were let down by bad handling in atrocious conditions .
10 However , there are many new avenues opening up for qualified staff in areas which have not traditionally been associated with nursing .
11 He watched her go down Newcastle Place with the bird cage in her arms , and pity rose up like yeasty dough in his chest , restricting his breath .
12 You will need a detective , be it a police officer or some individual caught up for good reason in the investigation , who is capable of seeing deeply into people 's characters , of putting himself like Simenon 's Maigret into , not so much other people 's hoes , as into other people 's minds and souls .
13 These factors have added up to heavy oversubcription in France , and across Europe , where the lists have already closed ( British investors still have until Friday ) .
14 ‘ The Commitments ’ , with an all Irish cast and based on a book by Roddy Doyle , would be perceived here as an Irish film , but director Alan Parker is English , the screenwriters were British , the costumes were designed and made in England ( to look like they had been picked up in second-hand shops in Dublin ) and , perhaps more significantly , the film was financed with American and British money .
15 An anti-Nazi lawyer , Serge Klarsfeld , discovered in mid-November that a Second World War filedrawn up by French police in October 1940 on the instructions of the Gestapo and containing information on all Jewish people in Paris was still in existence at the Ministry of War Veterans , where it was apparently used to check pension claims .
16 This all adds up to huge difficulties in providing for the population .
17 The air quality over much of Britain deteriorated during hot weather in May , with a build up of photochemical smog in some areas .
18 Leaving gaps in the base of the wall near ground level will prevent the build up of excessive water in the soil behind .
19 The Staffordshire Blithe , whose lower reaches escaped the axe and are therefore witness to how exquisite a properly managed river can be , was picked out for special mention in the Journal of Agriculture for 1927 .
20 Further research is carried out into rural lifestyles in the 1840s .
21 In terms of scientific choice , for example , it is possible to establish the value placed upon a country 's contribution to high-energy physics , and to decide whether or not such research should be supported , but it would be difficult to measure the individual contributions made by isolated single researchers from small departments in the UK , when the major part of their work is carried out at international centres in Geneva , or California .
22 The technology has evolved from operations already carried out at coastal sites in Scotland in which lengths of oil and gas pipelines are made into bundles which are towed offshore at control depths for installation at oil and gasfields .
23 En route , interviews will also be carried out with other actors in the network contributing to the introduction of this innovatory cooking process ; the advertisers , cookery magazines , consumer protection bodies etc .
24 Jim , who organises the league , said : ‘ The improvements at Thorntree Park were carried out with local people in mind , providing easy access to the facilities they want . ’
25 During 1984 , a survey was carried out of in-service training in public library authorities in the UK .
26 During 1984 a survey was carried out of in-service training in public libraries in the UK .
27 From General Portfolio comes the Financial Health Scheme , which provides cash for surgical operations carried out under general anaesthetic in a UK hospital .
28 More aggressive marketing was carried out by door-to-door canvassers in some Boards , and promotional advertising also increased as the supply situation got easier .
29 The research will be conducted in cooperation with the project ‘ Subcontracting and the small business ’ also ESRC financed , which relates to the UK and is being carried out by other economists in the University of East Anglia 's Economics Research Centre .
30 The firebombing of an Istanbul department store on Dec. 25 , in which 11 people died , was apparently carried out by Kurdish students in protest at the deaths the previous day of at least eight Kurds attending funerals in the south-east .
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