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

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1 Cross bunkers are common 70 or so yards short of the greens , which are all well bunkered , some fiendishly .
2 But for the next two decades , as the volume of junk outstanding rose to $15 billion in 1980 and then $201 billion in 1989 , the default rate stayed low .
3 Yet he appeared surprised to find in Kursk guberniia near the end of 1922 that even villages near to the Moscow railway line had received their last single copies some months earlier .
4 Furthermore , a subtle difference can be noticed in the migrations of the open complexes formed with the wild-type and mutant enzymes in the presence of CRP and cAMP at the lac promoter ( Fig. 1 ; compare lane 3 to lanes 2 , 4 , 5 and also lane 8 to lanes 7 , 9 , 10 ) .
5 That left the companies ; yet the first of them was in the hands of the receiver , who could bring an action by virtue of the Insolvency Act 1986 ( section 42 and also para 5 of Schedule 1 ) .
6 Since the 1990 Budget , parents with a child in a workplace nursery do not pay tax on the value of the care , but women employed by companies that either ‘ buy ’ places at private nurseries or the 60 or so firms such as British Gas , National Power , Debenhams and BMW which issue childcare vouchers ( worth an average £27 a week ) must pay tax on what is treated as a perk .
7 She had a track record of less than wonderful relationships , unpaid bills , and three hundred or so cassettes all in the wrong cases .
8 Losses of £500m for 1988 and over £2 billion for 1989 have already depleted free assets , especially for the 5,000-odd names on excess-of-loss syndicates .
9 It may even win Mr Rowland backing within the market and among outside names ( the individuals who provide Lloyd 's capital ) , though they will be dismayed by his forecasts of losses of up to £2.8 billion ( $1.4 billion ) for 1990 and over £1 billion for 1991 .
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