Example sentences of "[verb] [adv prt] [prep] [det] [noun] in " in BNC.
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1 | Applying the principles laid down by this House in American Cyanamid Co. v. Ethicon Ltd. [ 1975 ] A.C. 396 , he first asked himself whether there was a serious question to be tried ; he held that there was , the question being whether or not the facts were such that section 47 was incompatible with article 30 . |
2 | Many of the rules laid down by this syndicat in 1904 were later taken as the basic framework around which the AOC regulations for Champagne were formulated in 1927 . |
3 | On the one hand , the memorandum of association must qualify the company 's ability to provide surveying services , to the effect that such business must be carried on at all times in accordance with the Rules of Conduct for the time being of the RICS . |
4 | So , as the couple fly off for another holiday in Richard 's private jet , they can be happy in the knowledge that in the unlikely event that Richard should ever loose his millions , they 'll be able to live on love . |
5 | We have come up against some prejudice in the dressage , but the nice thing is that at the end of the test sheets you often see the same comment from the judge — ‘ What a super pony ! ’ . ’ |
6 | After taking a series of measurements I put a numbered ring on each bird 's leg so that if one came to grief and was picked up at some time in the future , its identity could be established . |
7 | Neither Galley nor his friends have ever been caught up in any incidents in Lothian Road . |
8 | He came back readily when his name was spoken ; they saw him not tools-in-hand in his lodge under the church , nor frowning thoughtfully over his tracing tables , but naked to the waist and brown in the harvest-fields , swinging a sickle instead of a mallet , a slender young fellow with grass seeds in his tangle of dark hair , who might have come out of any cottage in the hamlet . |
9 | Unofficially , therefore , I am anxious to assist her — and Lord Dacre , I may add — to come out of this coil in the best possible way . ’ |
10 | So again we 're going to come back to several themes in a fairly repetitive way , and we — do n't forgive us for this if you do n't like it , but we 're certainly going to talk about certain things again and again and again , but what it really comes down to , is ‘ Learn what the media 's all about , learn what they want , learn what you can provide , see whether you can match this , in a sense , and see whether you can make it work to your advantage ’ . |
11 | To be blunt , you can be a sensible young woman and be escorted back to your family , or carried out of this wilderness in a sack . |
12 | It is important to distinguish between such lexical analysis of uncontrolled terms in thesis titles , ( which has not been carried out in any detail in the present study but which is one of the factors analysed in a paper in preparation by the author ) , and the subject classification carried out by Rolfe , Will and in the Laming list . |
13 | I wondered if she 'd moved on to another place in the forest without saying anything , but when I stood perfectly still , I could hear the rhythmic scratching of her karaso from behind some trees , and the occasional tearing sound when she accidentally caught it in the undergrowth . |
14 | The following are diagrams of a machine where a letter is put in and operated on by each box in turn as the letter goes along the conveyor belt . |
15 | We drove off to another barracks in Lille where we were taken individually into an office occupied by a portly Major ; he handed each of us a pile of papers and we were told to sign each one at the bottom . |
16 | Former Midland carworkers and Tyneside shipbuilders seemed by contrast worn out , despairingly lost , cut off from former workmates in their conurbations . |
17 | The encounter can break off at any stage in the process of escalation . |
18 | Blackgrass has built up to such levels in some of its traditional heavyland haunts that some cereal growers are now reporting severe problems in controlling it . |
19 | By the use of one-way valves , air pressure can be built up in each chamber in turn by moving the piston back and forth . |
20 | Look , I 'm going to be snarled up in another meeting in a few minutes . |
21 | On this typical page of shooting script are given the essential directions needed to set up for each shot in a sequence . |
22 | The book was certainly the most thorough document of a country made up to that point in time , and received accolades from all quarters . |
23 | But last Saturday Major climbed on to that soapbox in Luton . |
24 | And we could really , add in for each organism in different weights the significance of each of the factors on each side . |
25 | Local radio stations in the state capitals were handed over to these states in 1978 , but the same policy did not apply to television . |
26 | Going over to some friends in Stockwood . |
27 | From the Friarfold Vein complicated branch veins run off in all directions in what is called a ribbon deposit . |
28 | A Sergeant with a crudely reconstructed pink blob of a nose — obviously bitten off at some stage in his professional or previous career — sat at a damascened bronze data-desk stained green with cupreous patina . |
29 | ( I was amazed to see children in a playground in a Sydney suburb lining up in this fashion in the late Seventies . ) |
30 | We would expect regulations to be drawn up under those headings in the hope that the privatised companies would be obliged to act upon them . |