Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] [prep] [noun sg] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Sauron is defeated and his Ring taken by Isildur , only to set in motion the crisis at the end of the Third Age .
2 He bids farewell to sorrow , hoping henceforth to unpick with patience the lock of his disease , taking his punishment , and seeking to amend his life , giving thanks , and asking for mercy .
3 It will create interest in the foreground which I think is important and often , especially looking across water an expanse of water if you have n't got any interesting detail in the foreground yo you have to go a long way into the picture before it begins to get interesting .
4 No such act of measurement could change what those spins already were ; it could only bring to light a state of affairs which had existed from the moment of separation .
5 As the work proceeds she/he makes tentative decisions on what to do with each title , and in doing so obviously takes into account the amount of money shortly to be used for replenishing the stock .
6 In my view the trial judge , dealing as he was with a most difficult and distressing case under the necessity to give a decision immediately , did not sufficiently take into account the degree of pressure required to constitute undue influence in the case of a patient in the position of Miss T. I agree with Lord Donaldson of Lymington M.R. that there is abundant evidence which would justify this court in coming to the conclusion that she was subjected to the undue influence of her mother which vitiated her decision .
7 This user receives information from LIFESPAN , but only enters into LIFESPAN the fact that a particular quality check has passed , or failed .
8 This user receives information from LIFESPAN , but only enters into LIFESPAN the fact that a particular quality check has passed , or failed .
9 And you 'd also better take into account the fact that I want to get on with some work while I 'm here .
10 For this reason , in drafting a lease the draftsman should constantly have in mind the nature of the demised property .
11 They 'd all gone to bed the night before when I 'd returned from a last noggin with Harry .
12 In none of these cases could the exposure be classified as substantial enough to call into question the validity of the control schools .
13 In answer to my office colleagues who saw me manhandling a hopper-shaped device into my car boot the other week : no , I was not setting up a home distillery , merely preparing to field-test a pond filter .
14 ‘ Good news , ’ says Chairman James Hann , ‘ but still not really good enough bearing in mind the level of investment in our company — but we are getting there .
15 Real control of exercise , like real control of food intake , needs to be flexible enough to take into account the unpredictability of life , your fluctuations in mood , the vagaries of fortune .
16 The jury which made the award did not know that 56-year-old Susie Quintana had lost her long fight for life the day before .
17 The idea is to constantly bear in mind the principle of balance , if you can patch up faults as you go along then you will finish the job in hand .
18 So bearing in mind the government itself has never iss er initiated any criminal action against auditors criticised in D T I reports , there are no effective sanctions .
19 ( e ) I would not think it right , especially bearing in mind the development of the concept of economic duress , to regard the categories of compulsion for present purposes as closed .
20 Apart from other things , I 'm not bringing into court the fact that he liked to beat me .
21 More immediately , it was very good to see the Prime Ministers of Czechoslovakia and Hungary , and the acting Prime Minister of Poland , in Brussels on Monday , signing the association agreements between those countries and the Community and thus bringing to fruition an initiative begun by my right hon. Friend the Member for Finchley ( Mrs. Thatcher ) .
22 Nonetheless , the right of control conveyed to the consignee-bank in the ‘ no disp ’ clause ordinarily allowed the bank 's stoppage in transit , withdrawal of the goods at the departure pier , unloading of the goods already placed on board the vessel , warehousing or re-routing of these goods , including the right to deliver the goods to another consignee .
23 We can not predict in advance the way in which a case will be decided , nor can we find any ex post rationality to explain why cases were categorised in different ways .
24 In spite of the fact that Leese 's charges were much more blatant than in the original offence the authorities decided not to prosecute in case an acquittal might be misunderstood by the general public .
25 If the discrepancy between ‘ is ’ and ‘ ought ’ were ever finally resolved in effect the world of practical experience would be destroyed .
26 The summit did not discuss in depth the question of a possible enlargement of the EC or of relations with countries of the European Free-Trade Area ( EFTA ) .
27 But they are intended to illustrate the very general point that we can not know in advance the belief systems of the communities we are studying ; an important part of good fieldwork practice is to get to know them and take them into account at all stages of the research , up to and beyond the time of publication .
28 COHSE researcher Steven Weeks say his main concern is that the schemes being marketed ‘ are not designed to measure the type of jobs nurses do ’ .
29 The Companies Act 1985 does not specify in detail the business to be transacted at an AGM but it will normally include :
30 Give-away and competition programmes : Many items are given away as prizes or at premium prices , and while these are not named by brand an item which Is immediately recognisable can acquire some useful exposure .
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