Example sentences of "[prep] [adj] [prep] [art] [noun pl] of " in BNC.

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1 Once you have established the sub-totals for each of the groups of costs , their total will give you a good estimate of the final bill of your proposed project .
2 We have also produced separate leaflets for each of the groups of people .
3 The order which he presents is the product of the work of four boundary commissions , one for each of the countries of the United Kingdom .
4 Affiliated organisations , Constituency Labour Parties and Commons Members of Parliament may nominate for each of the offices of leader and deputy leader , one Commons Member of the Parliamentary Labour Party attending conference ( unless excused attendance as provided in sub-section ( c ) below ) as a delegate or ex-officio delegate .
5 What is needed is criteria relating to each of the aspects of generalization listed earlier in this section for each of the levels of a scheme .
6 Under the current interpretation of the Constitution the single representative for the District of Columbia and the two representatives for each of the territories of Guam , Puerto Rico , American Samoa and the Virgin Islands were entitled to vote only in legislative committees .
7 A different set of users may be specified for each of the types of information transferred by LIFESPAN RDBI .
8 About two-thirds of the sacks of refuse had gone , and the pit she had seen was as if it had never been , under a litter of dead leaves where a couple of blackbirds foraged .
9 Subsequently a development of the theme has appeared in Archaeology as Human Geography ( Butzer , 1982 ) , in Geoarchaeology ( Davidson and Shackley , 1976 ) and in a book which endeavours to develop the theme of the nature of the environment during each of the phases of British prehistory ( Simmons and Tooley , 1981 ) .
10 There is little trace of his activities from then until his participation during 1659 in the debates of the Rota Club formed by James Harrington [ q.v . ] .
11 Yet it is an objective standard which the directors themselves define , and not one that is imposed upon them by the courts , who regard it as illegitimate to substitute their own view of what constitutes the best interests of the company or the shareholders for that of the directors of the company .
12 He relies for that upon the dicta of Lord Denning M.R. in In re Bramblevale Ltd. [ 1970 ] Ch. 128 , 137A .
13 I 'm probably quite wrong about that , but you know , when I think of Matisse and Giacometti and people like that , I ca n't compare them ; I think they fall very much below I may be quite wrong about this below the qualities of Picasso , because I think Picasso has such a very universal sense of things .
14 Er we are confirmed in our reservations about this by the results of the regional census study as I noted in my brief commentary N Y three .
15 There is much debate about this in the bars of Condom , the historic centre of armagnac production .
16 This gives us information about some of the vibrations of the ground state ( see , for example , Fig. 5.6 ) .
17 I learned a lot about development and about myself and about some of the origins of racist thinking .
18 Talk about some of the effects of sound patterning , eg rhyme , alliteration , and figures of speech , eg similes , metaphors , personification , in imaginative uses of English .
19 Following mounting concern about some of the problems of adoption and fostering , a departmental committee was set up to investigate .
20 Secondly , I shall be talking with Colin Thompson and John Drury about some of the implications of Vatican Two and the forthcoming visit of the Pope .
21 The MINSE approach requires a detailed investigation which moves beyond the intuition of the analyst , and can therefore only be accurate with a continual input of local expertise which was obviously missing during some of the phases of the research project .
22 We can therefore use the execute to make up for some of the deficiencies of a computer 's instruction set ; examples might be the coding of jump tables where the Computer does not have indexed jump instructions , or operations on dynamically variable-length data where the operand length is coded in the instruction format ; the latter is illustrated in Figure 3.18 .
23 ‘ We were never as despondent as many others , knowing that the benefits of the squad system would compensate for some of the retirals of senior players , ’ he added .
24 When the fashion changed after the war , it was difficult for some older singers , just as it was for some of the stars of silent films when the talkies came in .
25 ‘ It is natural for some of the countries of Western Europe to view the prospects of German reunification with anxiety , ’ he said .
26 Additional data collected inhouse on a Siemens/Xentronics area detector and at the SRS on an Enraf-Nonius FAST area detector ( detailed in ref.25 ) were merged with the IP SRS data for some of the stages of the structure determination but refinement and the current model are based solely on the IP SRS data .
27 I am not necessarily holding any brief for some of the activities of certain unions with members working in the North sea .
28 And from the same cause Collections for some of the schemes of the Church have not been made .
29 For some of the families of those who died , the issue remains entirely current .
30 In an attempt to account for some of the peculiarities of the sternopleural region , Ferris ( 1940 , etc. ) has argued that the greater part of the ventral side of the thorax of some insects is derived from pleural structures , but further critical study of his theory is necessary .
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