Example sentences of "[conj] [vb -s] [prep] the [noun sg] in " in BNC.

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1 It also believes that planning can ensure that new buildings are designed in a way which it likes , and has an ability to prevent anything , however small , happening near its own house which reduces its value or interferes with the way in which it has been in the habit of using it .
2 If he then varies or strays from the agreement in an unsatisfactory way you are only asking for trouble if you do n't act promptly for full recovery .
3 This requires that when a record is added to the file it is stored in its home bucket if any record that is a synonym is at present in the home bucket , and that if space becomes available in a bucket , any synonym that randomizes to the bucket in which space is now available is moved into the home bucket .
4 The behaviour of atoms in this sensibility is governed by the same principles that apply to human systems , or any energetic system throughout nature or the universe that interacts with the medium in which it exists ( its environment ) and exchanges energy .
5 ‘ Some sort of horrible person that lives under the ground in a hot place , I think , ’ said Grimma .
6 I look to the right hon. Member for Sparkbrook when I say that I am not clear about the precise intention that lies behind the phrase in new clause 2 , which refers to ’ satisfactory access to advice and representation ’ — this is for applicants — ’ from advisers and representatives of their choice ’ .
7 The key concept that floats to the top in mainstream criticism of Distant Voices , Still Lives is that of art .
8 The basic ingredient of beer needs careful nurturing and transforming into malt before it is ready to begin the slow , ruminative journey that ends with the pint in the pub .
9 We believe that it is the failure to map from roles to names that accounts for the difficulty in keeping track of who is doing what to whom in certain complicated texts with many characters — some Russian novels , for example .
10 And she gets up in the night and sits by the telephone in the hall in the dark .
11 There is chemical pollution discharged into rivers from factories and chemical plants , which clogs up the rivers with toxic substances and adds to the filth in the seas .
12 The race starts at the Royal Oak , Owl Lane , and finishes at the maypole in the high street .
13 As part of the investigation into attitudes to mass electricity , the project explores the reception by the public of plans for a National Grid and looks at the way in which this programme was presented to those most likely to be environmentally and economically affected by its construction .
14 The vent pipe from the hot water cylinder is fitted over the top of the cistern and passes through the grommet in the lid
15 Then it pupates and hibernates through the winter in the chrysalis state — unusually ; most butterfly species hibernate as adults or , occasionally , as caterpillars .
16 The guy we now know is called Casey stomps out of the phonebox and glares up the road in our direction so hard you could swear he sees us .
17 Shortly after the official opening ceremony a collection of no less than 11 Norseman floatplanes that had gathered at Red Lake , started-up , taxied around Howey Bay , took-off ( a tremendous effect as the sound of 11 Pratt and Whitney R–134s revving at full power reverberated around the bay ) and performed a series of fly-bys and overshoots over the bay in salute of CF–DRD and the weekend events .
18 This could be merged with names and addresses from the database in Task 1 .
19 What 's needed is a conclusion that pulls together the threads of your argument and rounds off the answer in a satisfying way .
20 The pink of this species is generally verging on pale purple , and extends from the head in a wedge which tails off to the lower part of the back of the body .
21 The Park was created in 1967 and runs along the watershed in a strip never more than twelve kilometres wide , from the Aspe valley to the mass if of Néouvielle more than 100 kilometres to the east .
22 Finally , the person who is ‘ it ’ says ‘ goose ’ and runs round the circle in a clockwise direction .
23 In any event , as appears from the context in both Golder and Oliva , the burden of Lord Parker C.J. 's statement is to be found in the second part of it , under which the jury is to be directed that the witness 's previous statement will not as such be evidence upon which the jury can act .
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