Example sentences of "[adj] [noun pl] bring [adv prt] " in BNC.

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1 In both cases too , those private choices in some cases bring about the tragedy of the commons ( Hardin 1972 ) .
2 This does not directly tell us anything about the ‘ weakness ’ or ‘ strength ’ of UK manufacturing , but it is interesting to note the sectoral distribution : UK multinationals in the food , drink and tobacco industry export more capital through this route than comes in ; in mechanical engineering the inflow greatly surpasses the outflow , while in electrical engineering UK multinationals export more capital than foreign firms bring in .
3 It is doubtful whether such social occasions bring about any lasting reconciliation between the two groups .
4 Our principal concern , in the present context , is to consider how conflicts between social groups develop within the limits of given structural conditions , how such conflicts bring about political change , and what kinds of social group play a major role in this process .
5 Threatened groups bring in wives from outside and thus establish important social links promising external support and succour .
6 And such observations bring out one of the most arresting features of hypochondria : its almost total independence from any real diseases from which the hypochondriac suffers .
7 These operations bring out effects of many kinds and on different levels of abstraction : high-quality or low-quality products or services ; radically new products or only small improvements in the old ones ; high or low job satisfaction among employees ; commercial profit or loss .
8 These workshops bring in people of mixed physical and mental disabilities , who are usually excluded from these sort of things .
9 Many people also complain that our present hierarchies bring out the nastier aspects of human behavior , like greed , insensitivity , careerism and self-importance .
10 The ability of a bigger bank to absorb a smaller one into its systems is a main reason why purchases of smaller banks bring up to three times bigger savings than mergers of equals .
11 ‘ The small orders bring in the big ones . ’
12 Sometimes it is possible to decide what particular activities bring on an attack of giddiness .
13 Surely what is relevant is the response to the statement , ‘ Single parents bring up children as well as two parents ’ , a vastly different proposition .
14 The research is concerned with the ways in which Hindu parents bring up their children in Britain in accordance with their own traditions .
15 Just as the early European explorers of the North Atlantic would bring back the tusks of narwhals and pass them off as the horns of unicorns , so would the early Arabian and Indian sailors bring back the massive bones of the Cassowary as evidence of the giant " roc " of the Sinbad sagas , or the Garuda bird of Hindu mythology , which is today the symbol of Indonesia 's national airline .
16 The so-called modern values bring about a convergence of culture through improved mass communications , the elites of Third World countries come to share the same culture as those in the industrialised world .
17 For Marlene , her team and 40,000 Runrig fans , these four words bring back memories of a fantastic outdoor concert on the water 's edge .
18 Similarly , our modern managers bring on their favoured assistants , introduce them to the secrets of the filofax and the business lunch , and teach them how to influence important people .
19 Almost every year , blue tits bring up a brood of chicks in the nest box fixed to the garden fence at the Kilwinning home of Hunterston security guard Angus Devoy and his wife Irene .
20 Since total taxes on financial services bring in over SFr9 billion a year in revenues , politicians are reluctant to vote for change .
21 Only after years of dogged activity by tenants backing up their own experiences with systematic surveys , did local authorities bring in the experts , and the tenants were right all along : they were living in leaking , sweating , unstable structures .
22 It is also the centre of a men-only pilgrimage in February , when local farmers bring in handfuls of hair cut from the tails of their animals and burn them before the sanctuary as an offering to St Blaise , as the patron saint of stock-breeders .
23 In the role of clients , these local leaders bring in their own supporters behind their patron , in return receiving political advancement for themselves and small benefits for the union ( Rothstein 1979 ) .
24 There are those for whom the thought of rifling through rails of musty clothes bring back horrible memories of student life .
25 Sometimes ads in local papers bring in volunteers .
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