Example sentences of "[adj] [noun sg] [verb] [adv] [prep] a " in BNC.
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1 | Even a computer-literate user brought up on a different type of mainframe may find the nested screens in CMS and the XEDIT editor offputting at first . |
2 | The normal scientist works confidently within a well-defined area dictated by a paradigm . |
3 | — As in the terga , the sternal region of each segment consists typically of a segmental plate and an intersegmental sclerite , the latter associated with the segmental region in front of it . |
4 | The engine of The Abbott sounded deafening in the silence , the loud spluttering replaced rapidly by a rumble as the boat moved away from the pier . |
5 | It informs Flashman of the dire consequences of the club 's financial predicament , recommending that the controversial chairman sells out to a consortium as quickly as possible . |
6 | But , read the chapter this way or that , if there was ever a case for recognising that unions have a right to share in the management of companies , that case depended critically upon a general expectation — amounting to a near-certainty — that , rather than give primacy to their sectional interests , unions would and could act in the general interest whenever it was necessary or desirable for them to do so . |
7 | RIGHT Mandarin comes back to a hero 's welcome . |
8 | He wanted his personal belief and his professional expertness to come out as a single attribute . |
9 | That opposition began locally with a meeting in Fintown , Co . |
10 | Each papilla arising entirely from a single area is represented by the letter m . |
11 | Russell turned to Dexter with a look of surprise and irritation , as if he were a complete stranger butting in on a private conversation — which indeed was just how the sergeant felt . |
12 | ‘ And the villagers let a complete stranger drive off with a machine that could play music from the future … ’ |
13 | Now 30 per cent of its junior management are women , although that figure falls away to a paltry 1 per cent at the highest levels . |
14 | A lined mouth stretched back in a screech . |
15 | At 8 o'clock on Friday , June 15th , over 30 teenagers met in the church Family Centre for a strange ritual known only to a few as MIDNIGHTICESKATING . |
16 | The Duke was revelling in the occasion , his toothless mouth curved up in a great leer like the mask of comedy . |
17 | The stuttering start , a last lap breakdown in Canada and the fiasco of Portugal , where his rear right wheel fell off after a pit stop , undermined his campaign . |
18 | She wore an oatmeal flannel coat and skirt which even Alexandra could see was badly cut , and a heavily pleated cream blouse , the collar fastened with a huge hideous brooch made out of a green polished pebble set in silver . |
19 | He was young and very beautiful ; brown hair springing back from a broad forehead , blue eyes dark as pansies , a smooth , curling , sulky mouth . |
20 | It was in some measure propped up by a crimson tea-caddy , also of Japan ware . |
21 | It takes not only effort but courage of another kind to love again after a certain age , when the body may be far from beautiful — and a sense of humour , too . |
22 | Then in the 1960s British Rail came up with a novel idea for a faster train . |
23 | British Rail comes in for a fair bit of stick from travellers who would heartily support the loud speaker announcement heard by Philip White . |
24 | It was like the scene where Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid start to rob yet another ‘ easy ’ train only to find an armed and mounted posse leaping out of a carriage . |
25 | One suspects its high rating owes less to a fondness for social-democratic parties with close trade-union links than to a loose wish for economic efficiency plus social justice . |
26 | At the Apollo 17 site an experiment was carried out by the astronauts which gave the seismic wave speeds down to a few kilometres depth in the vicinity of the site . |
27 | A dim light came on behind a blind in the Frankenstein mansion . |
28 | This term refers not to a single theory but rather to a set of assumptions underlying a particular approach to the study of perception and cognition . |
29 | The Confederation of British Industry stepped forward with a plan that practically doubled the sum to be spent by the government : £21 billion to rewrite the nation 's economic geography and save it from catastrophe . |
30 | But Shakespeare 's manipulation ultimately disrupts Harsnett 's design : ‘ In Shakespeare , the realization that demonic possession is a theatrical imposture leads not to a clarification — the clear-eyed satisfaction of a man who refuses to be gulled — but to a deeper uncertainty , a loss of moorings , in the face of evil . ’ |