Example sentences of "[art] [adv] [adj] [noun] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | The incredibly low cost of living makes such evenings a real pleasure . |
2 | Hence his reluctance to start painting before he had mastered the incredibly difficult art of drawing — and drawing the figure especially . |
3 | Take into account the incredibly high standards of service in the excellent hotels and you have every possible ingredient for the ultimate holiday experience . |
4 | From the token half dozen kits from Malaysia we can also see not only the difference in basic shape , but also the lavishly conspicuous consumption of gold paint to provide an overall decoration of either flowers or clouds . |
5 | He also claims that negligence finding was made without evidence being led demonstrating the manner in which he did not reach the professionally required standard of care . |
6 | Here are ranged such organizations as the National Association of Language in Education Centres ( NALEC , 1985 ) on the one hand , whose membership commands direct access through professional development teachers and initial training lectures to classroom teachers and who take the predominantly phenomenological approach to language of ‘ reading through real books ’ . |
7 | In the predominantly German districts of northwest Pomerania , however , 14 of the 34 districts recorded a decline in their population in the same period . |
8 | Ismael Hassan Metareum , from the predominantly Moslem province of Aceh in northern Sumatra , was seen as a relative moderate , acceptable to both the armed forces and the government . |
9 | But with the vastly experienced Imran in tandem with the brilliantly fluent Inzamam-ul-Haq the revised target of 193 off 36 overs suddenly looked possible . |
10 | In a short study it is impossible to deal in depth with the vastly complex web of politics that surrounded Barbarossa ; a glance at the list of popes shows just how complex the situation was ; hardly had any pope become established and negotiations opened , than another was taking his place . |
11 | In spite of the vastly increased volume of traffic , fewer people are now killed on our roads than at any time since 1948 . |
12 | The vastly increased use of Place of Safety Orders — a quarter of all admissions in one study ( Millham et al. , 1986 ) , a third in another ( Packman et al . , |
13 | For one thing Barthes 's perverse perspective on difference foregrounds a different history , one wherein there is no simple privileging of the marginal : the paradoxically perverse interrelationship between centre and margins , whereby the marginal returns to the centre in a way which disarticulates the centre/margin binary itself , is signified , in this instance , by Barthes inaugurating his professorship with a lecture on the significance of perversity vis-à-vis language . |
14 | This provides the reason why it was once extensively cultivated in the Aube , where its more southerly location and lack of limestone subsoil sometimes renders wines lacking the desirably high degree of acidity required for classic Champagnes . |
15 | The unity of the ending is a fairy tale happy-ever-after that provides a jolting contrast to the grimly realistic descriptions of misogyny and racial hatred . |
16 | DAVID BRYANT 'S retirement from international bowls competition at the age of 61 signals the end of the mostly gentlemanly revolution in sport . |
17 | Now I have been digressing and let me say quite clearly that I never knew the answer and I do not know it now , how the tremendously high level of morale was sustained , not just in the Pathfinders , but throughout the Command as a whole . |
18 | The bill identifies much of the blame for the tremendously high rate of deforestation in India as belonging to the adivasis or tribal peoples , who have been systematically marginalised and impoverished for over a thousand years , and who have now retreated into the mountains and remaining forests of central India ( a close-up case study is provided of a tribal group , the Sora , in sect. 7.4 ) . |
19 | Dialectal English ; language in which the widely accepted rules of grammar and syntax are not necessarily observed . |
20 | Much of the discussion took place in the IWC 's scientific committee , which met before the conference proper , with arguments centring on the widely varying estimates of minke numbers . |
21 | Underlying her concern is the widely differing approach to discrimination north and south of the border . |
22 | For such results show the police to be ‘ on the side of righteousness ’ , arraigned with the numerically superior forces of goodness and order in their fight against darkness and the void . |
23 | Relatives of the electric eel , the weakly electric knife-fish of South America , and an unrelated group , the mormyrids of Africa , also use this technique . |
24 | The one big difference lies in the fundamentally rural character of feudalism . |
25 | It is this emphasis on supplementary rather than substitute care ( Davis , 1981 ) , growing out of a recognition of the fundamentally shared nature of parenting , which should be the driving force behind a new direction for child care policy . |
26 | Kingdon 's ideas may seem like a recipe for environmental determinism , but the link drawn between a recent origin for humans and the fundamentally local nature of adaptation means that his book is also a powerful indictment of any attempt to rank human populations in terms of progress or to see the evolution of human races as anything other than short-term responses to particular problems . |
27 | " The basis of such a union " was " the social market economy … determined particularly by private ownership , the free establishment of prices and the fundamentally full freedom of movement of labour , capital , goods and services " . |
28 | The World Health Organisation 's definition that health is a state of complete physical , mental , and social wellbeing and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity redresses the medically biased emphasis on disease or infirmity . |
29 | By 1902 her fame as a hard-headed , cigar-smoking , businesswoman , capable of holding her own with the shrewdest of her male rivals in the intensely competitive world of industry , had already won her recognition ( from the Pall Mall Gazette ) as ‘ one of the most remarkable women in Great Britain' , famous enough to be caricatured by the Punch cartoonist , Bert Thomas , in the comic journal Ally Sloper in 1904 . |
30 | From the producers ' point of view , the powerfully addictive quality of sugar became an important asset , resulting in an almost infinitely elastic demand . |