Example sentences of "[adj] [noun pl] [modal v] [verb] [prep] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Does my right hon. Friend agree also that those people will not welcome the pledge that was given from the Opposition Benches yesterday to ensure that high-spending Labour authorities can go with gay abandon to yet higher spending ? |
2 | The proportion of manufactured goods in Malaysia 's total exports would rise from 60.4 per cent in 1990 to 81.8 per cent in 2000 . |
3 | Total exports must pay for total imports , and if a country 's exports fall then imports will also fall unless the deficiency in exports can be made good in the ways specified . |
4 | RIGHT Vets can help with behavioural problems whether or not these are a reflection of an underlying medical disorder . |
5 | It was a remarkably optimistic speech to Edinburgh University politics society , in a week when the Government 's economic policies will come under severe criticism if , as expected , the number of unemployed rises above 3 million . |
6 | Infringement of European rules may lead to substantial fines and adverse publicity . |
7 | The working groups will look at particular topics , consider the existing legislation and help prepare a discussion document for wider public consultation setting out the various options for reform . |
8 | Equally , emotional attitudes may figure as standard causes of certain sorts of utterance . |
9 | A boat with eight units can pull in 3800 squid in 40 minutes . |
10 | There is also provision for private litigation , whereby private parties can sue for three times the damages inflicted upon them by violations of the law . |
11 | But unless policies were changed , the number of private cars would increase by 45 per cent by 2010 and road haulage by 42 per cent . |
12 | Children who have been integrated into mainstream schools can return at any time for help and are called back at six-monthly intervals for checks . |
13 | The value of such studies is that they show plainly the ubiquity of popular political action , which may be diffuse , episodic , lacking any clearly formulated doctrine , or expressing itself mainly in religious or cultural terms , but always provides a matrix from which political organizations can emerge in favourable circumstances . |
14 | More sober advocates are content to imply that in Britain a Conservative constituency party would field a wet , a damp and a dry candidate , whilst Labour candidates would range from deep crimson to shell pink , and the Liberal Democrats would presumably run at least one ex-Liberal and one ex-SDP candidate . |
15 | The new models are so easy to operate that even wayward teenage sons can cope with all the washing while you 're away . |
16 | Figure 11.1 shows an example of a flyer giving basic details of the school , further flyers can focus on particular aspects of expertise or community provision . |
17 | Certainly it became economic to pay recording artists large fees ; and without mass-production , few recordings of top artists would survive in playable form today . |
18 | What further activities could arise from this exercise ? |
19 | Mr Millan said that he was talking to UK authorities and expressed some optimism the matter could be resolved , although EC officials believe the tougher rules could lead to new battles with the Treasury . |
20 | Some birds can switch to alternative food sources if one should fail and most gulls ( with the exception of kittiwake ) are good examples of this adaptability . |
21 | There will always be the possibility that his spontaneous preferences will change with wider information or finer perceptiveness , and to retreat from awareness in order to cling to a highly-valued end will be one of the great offences against ‘ Be aware ’ . |
22 | And although some personnel may sit on several committees of the various bodies this is not enough to ensure adequate liaison , because there may be a conflict of loyalties . |
23 | It was not , for them , simply a matter of supposing that what held true in some cases would hold in all , but of their coming to see a particular case as an instance of an intuitively recognizable universal truth . |
24 | And erm some houses used to some houses used to go up some steps and two steps and The one where I used to be and you went you used to go up two steps . |
25 | An organisation might have a structure which reflects a sin culture ; on the other hand , different structures reflecting different cultures might exist in separate parts ( or departments ) of the organisation . |
26 | an organisation which is spread over a wide geographical area is likely to decentralise authority on a regional basis , so that different cultures might predominate in different regions ; and |
27 | SHORT-TERM political and commercial judgments can lead to commercial advantage but threaten a long-term commitment to shipping safety and quality , said Lloyd 's Register chairman Sir Roderick MacLeod in the 1991 report published yesterday . |
28 | Thomas said their improved performances should lead to better fixtures next season . |
29 | Suggested by Margaret Meek , a CBF governor , there will be a move towards a team approach , and a group of around 12 readers will look at 1993 books , their selections co-ordinated by Madeleine Lindley , children 's book specialist based in Oldham . |
30 | Yet the system remains defective , with no limits at all on what British parties can spend on national campaigns , or on the size of donations they can receive . |