Example sentences of "[noun] often [verb] [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The fault often lies within the body and with there person 's perception of good health .
2 A whole armoury of biblical interpretation accompanies this mentality — one side often majoring on the sacrifice of Isaac in Genesis 22 and the other side of Thomas 's doubt in John 20 .
3 This is an important question because such a belief conflicts with the plausible assumption that intense emotion often endures beyond the situation that provoked it , and colours one 's reactions to later events .
4 It is a term often used in the description of military medals and badges .
5 Editor , — New patients registering with our general practice often complain about the time it takes us to get their NHS notes from the family health services authority .
6 The debtor himself has to apply for this type of order , in practice often encouraged by the plaintiff .
7 Experienced advisers never respond to this question , but the unrepresented applicant often responds to the question with bizarre unsupportable allegations of bias and corruption by the employer which are sometimes seized on by the tribunal to the prejudice of the applicant .
8 The motor industry often goes to the expense of building a completely new factory site to ensure that the manufacturing capability does match their requirements exactly .
9 These changes in social identity set the parameters of potential riots , but the actual incidence and seriousness of rioting often depended on the actions of individual officials and the presence of random catalysts which could prompt disturbances .
10 There are obvious analogies to the immune system , including the fact that these proteins can be induced and that there are extremes of individual variability often related to the presence of polymorphisms that can lead on occasion to hypersusceptibility to the effects of environmentally derived agents .
11 Right : Sue often sews in the living room , one of the lightest rooms in the house
12 Whereas readers often focus on the text of a critical work and skip through the quotations , here the eye is drawn to the poetry and resents the distraction of the critic 's argument .
13 Mathematical perspective of a Renaissance sort had not been used in European medieval art , where the size of a figure often derives from the person 's importance , God the father never being small .
14 Since the condition often occurs in the secondary-school years , the young person may not only be faced with the trauma of the diagnosis and the confusion of being still able to see clearly in some situations and not at all in others , but there may also have to be a decision to transfer the medium of communication from print to braille , all this taking place in the years leading up to important examinations .
15 Domes like Santiaguito often develop within the crater walls of an older volcano — Santiaguito itself is nested inside a large crater on the flanks of a volcano called Santa Maria .
16 This guidance often comes in the form of impulses to do this or that — to write to a friend , to read a certain book , to meditate , to go to a meeting , to buy some flowers , to sign up for an evening class .
17 One must add to this that the limitations to an experiment often lie in the performance of transducers , and the experimentalist should always be on the alert for new possibilities .
18 Like dacite domes , rhyolite domes often form within the crater of a preexisting volcano , but they may equally well pop up at the surface as isolated extrusions , not visibly related to any volcano .
19 Inefficient and ineffective note-making methods often lie at the heart of students ' inability to realise their potential .
20 Effective small talk often runs to a formula .
21 Visitors to ancient monastic sites often comment on an atmosphere of profound peace which they seem , instantly , to absorb .
22 This process is not of concern to archaeologists alone : the destruction of archaeological sites often coincides with the destruction of wildlife habitats and changes in the environment .
23 The powers set out in the rest of Clause 3 are standard matters often appearing in a company 's memorandum and , as is common practice , they are broadly worded for the sake of completeness .
24 The powers set out in the rest of Clause 3 are standard matters often appearing in a company 's memorandum and , as is common practice , they are broadly worded for the sake of completeness .
25 In developing work in the classroom one 's own expectations and experiences often interfere with a child 's progress and it is important to be aware of this and exercise self control .
26 These countries often agree to the Japanese forming joint ventures with local companies .
27 Look for other convenient , unchanging frames , low or mid , preferably where the substitution items fit in the middle , as tones often change at the end of an utterance .
28 Greta Ross often came to the beach to swim , but Mr Ross never came .
29 Standard contracts issued by trade or professional associations for the use of their members will be caught ( RIBA contracts for example ) as will individual standard conditions of the type often printed on the back of quotation forms or invoices .
30 One very special guest … this is … the Welsh Mountain sheep of the type often found on the Herfordshire Welsh border .
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