Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [vb infin] [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The plain fact is that some elements of the social charter would run the risk — indeed , would make it a real possibility — of this country returning to some of the trade union practices that did so much damage during the 1970s .
2 Why are we now getting a much better fit throughout the entire period simply by incorporating the dummy variable to the war period ?
3 Now if you just press the return key a couple of times right , and have a lot of actual and fitted , if you go into option three in the data post depression menu you will notice that the fit of our model is very very different right , so we are now getting a very very good correspondence between actual and fitted , notice that in our original model the thing started to break down at about nineteen thirty , right , just by allowing the intercept to vary , right , over the wartime we 've now got a much better fit throughout the whole period why is that the case ?
4 Threadworms are much more common than many people realise and can so easily sweep through the cleanest and most fastidious of families with young children .
5 But we 'll only really worry about the last page if you
6 The range of physical monitoring undertaken by the project has been extensive , and I can only briefly indicate below the main features of this and the conclusions so far reached .
7 I can only briefly touch upon the FAST Biosociety findings .
8 If the meaning of an utterance does not wholly reside in the semantic meaning , and if people can mean quite different things with the same words , how do human beings interpret — usually quite accurately — what is meant from what is said ?
9 Oh let's not all talk at the same time !
10 He does not greatly care for the dark purplish bathroom suite ( ‘ Damson ’ , the estate agent 's brochure had called the shade ) but it had been one of the things that attracted Marjorie when they bought the house two years ago — the bathroom , with its kidney-shaped handbasin and goldplated taps and sunken bath and streamlined loo and bidet .
11 Though a number of economists have made further assumptions about the behaviour of the economy — principally , that firms will substitute labour for capital if there is unemployment ( because in those circumstances real wages will fall ) — which remove some of the apparent instabilities , others have concluded that the instability still occurs because the actual rate of investment may still not necessarily coincide with the warranted rate of growth for full employment .
12 The terms ‘ old age ’ and ‘ retirement ’ are often used interchangeably , but they do not necessarily refer to the same things .
13 One of the difficulties in making the diagnosis of ME — which is a post viral syndrome with a multiplicity of symptoms — is that sufferers do not necessarily present with the same symptoms ; however the film showed most graphically how the entire family is affected by such a misunderstood illness .
14 However , please note that holidays do not necessarily return to the same port of departure .
15 Important as rules are , they do not necessarily bite with the same degree of force in every case .
16 The housing may rise in value , but people 's relative incomes may not necessarily rise by the same amount .
17 In discussing the various types of eruption that are generally recognized , it was emphasized that labels such as ‘ Strombolian ’ or ‘ Plinian ’ should only be applied to recognizable phases of an eruption ; they may not necessarily apply to the whole thing .
18 The family A useful definition is : ‘ a kinship network spanning three or more generations and involving relatives who do not necessarily live in the same house ’ ( Graham , 1984 , p.17 ) .
19 Furthermore , the figure stated for ‘ no ’ , probably also includes a number of those who wanted restrictions placed on the traditional model of sole practice ( and therefore answered ‘ no ’ to question 1 ) but who did not necessarily agree with the particular restriction proposed in question 2 .
20 Circumstances such as these or weather conditions , the time of year etc may cause some of the amenities we have described to be temporarily unavailable and some resort/hotel photographs may illustrate amenities and conditions that do not necessarily prevail throughout the whole season .
21 Andrew Eliel , editor of the guide , said the award had been launched because it was felt the best chef did not necessarily work in the best restaurant .
22 Enough has been said , however , to make it clear that regulation need not necessarily act in the public interest .
23 The two objectives do not necessarily lie in the same direction .
24 They can be easily reconfigured between different product lines ( Cohen and Zysman , 1987 : ch. 9 ) and do not necessarily conform to the linear layout .
25 The main points arising from this are that : ( 1 ) the vowel system is totally different from mainstream British English in terms of vowel-length , vowel-height , diphthongization and other properties ( for example , vowel-length is not usually contrastive , as it is alleged to be in RP , and so most vowel-phonemes , such as /e/ , as in gate , save , are realized as considerably longer or shorter allophones according to consonantal environment ) ; ( 2 ) allophones of phonemes can overlap phonetically with allophones of other phonemes in a manner that is not permitted by classical phoneme theory ( Bloomfield , 1933 ) ; ( 3 ) lexical items do not necessarily belong to the same vowel phoneme classes as they do in RP and SBE ( for example , whereas good and food have different vowels in most SBE , they have the same vowel in Ulster English ) ; and ( 4 ) many sets of lexical items exhibit vowel alternations , in that the vowels in these items are realizations of two different phonemes .
26 The second reason for this relative complexity is that , as we have already noticed , given lexical items do not necessarily belong to the same sets as in ‘ standard ’ English .
27 However , those who share the same class situation will not necessarily belong to the same status group .
28 Children start off as self-centred little beings and they do not naturally think of the other person .
29 If you are a person of fastidious intellectual taste you will not much care for the comic-strip account given in the preceding paragraph .
30 From the outset he had decided that he did not much care for the tall fair youth who seemed to look down his long nose at everything .
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