Example sentences of "[noun sg] to keep in [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | The figure to keep in mind is 12 . |
2 | Such surveillance should not , of course , be thrust on unwilling recipients without good cause , but it is good practice to keep in touch and know how people are getting on . |
3 | Their fanzine , Invasion Of The Wedding Present , is an attempt to keep in touch with the grass roots following . |
4 | There 's a sofa and armchair , a writing table , music from a threechannel radio and even a telephone to keep in touch with the landlubbers back home . |
5 | I think most actors are conscious of the need to keep in training . |
6 | The other , frightened of a similar propensity , consciously abhors what becomes so tedious , but unconsciously fuels the fury and whine because of the need to keep in touch with the repudiated blaming , whining self . |
7 | As a particular form of rationality a human being , considered as a total personality , is above all an effort to think things out by having a firm conception of its own nature , as this exists in the physical world , and of what will assist this nature to keep in existence . |
8 | Although it is winter time I am not afraid to move my bait higher in the water to keep in touch with the fish . |
9 | The size of the audience is also an important factor to keep in mind . |
10 | Reservoir roundup Extreme changes in weather culminated in fly anglers at Leighton Reservoir taking great care in fly selection to keep in contact with the fish . |
11 | She 's bought an exercise bike to keep in shape . |
12 | Because of the necessity to keep in step with the Parliamentary Party , the membership contained four MPs ( William Deedes , Edward Gardner QC , William Rees-Davies and Mark Carlisle ) , as well as the chairman . |
13 | In a speech to the Cortes , two months later , he referred to his regime as " providing the authority to keep in check the Spanish tendency to 'egotism and anarchy' " . |
14 | ‘ I am now running more than 40 miles a week to keep in peak fitness ready for the Potteries Marathon . ’ |
15 | While it is not always possible in practice to achieve this degree of balance , it is an ideal to keep in mind when shots containing a number of different visual elements are being set up . |
16 | This is an important consideration to keep in mind when designing Compact goals . |
17 | Most people feel an obligation to keep in contact with their siblings , but beyond that it is regarded as quite proper for relationships to vary in the level of intimacy and the type of support offered ( Firth , Hubert and Forge , 1970 ; Allan , 1979 ) . |
18 | On every local flight that I make in a single-seater glider , I do some sideslipping on the approach to keep in practice . |
19 | At common law the landlord will be liable to take reasonable care to keep in repair any essential means of access retained in his possession . |
20 | There is no pretence of competition with commercial banks for private sector business , and there is some suggestion that the accounts are maintained in order for the Bank to keep in touch with banking practice , although the degree to which such experience accrues is likely to be limited given the small number of accounts relative to a commercial bank . |
21 | This is an important thing to keep in mind . |
22 | In the absence of an express obligation , the landlord will have no duty to keep in repair any pipe or drain through which the tenant discharges soil or water , even if the pipe or drain is retained in the possession of the landlord ( Westminster ( Duke ) v Guild [ 1984 ] 3 All ER 144 ) . |
23 | Paging is a simple but fast way to keep in touch . |
24 | The convenient way to keep in touch with the folks abroad . |
25 | The way to keep in touch ! |
26 | In the past factors have used a Viewdata system to keep in touch with clients , but Lombard NatWest Commercial Services introduced an electronic data interchange ( EDI ) system in early 1990 . |
27 | Erm I think it 's also now pretty much common ground that the capacity of York city is around three thousand three hundred , but I think in in in taking an view on that , and in taking any view o on future windfalls , it is necessary for the panel to keep in mind that historically in the nineteen eighties windfalls were coming through at a time when it was not a adopted local plan for the city of York , so to some extent anything by definition of a substantial size was likely to be a windfall , erm , but also more to the point than that definitional point , I would expect to see , and I think what Mr Curtis has said earlier on that the local plan is likely to tighten up on criteria for release of sites , both small and large , he referred to the shortage of open space , and I would expect to see a policy change in short , a policy climate change , within the city of York that would constrain past historical rates of windfall release . |
28 | When they reach retirement age , most people qualify for the basic pension , which is normally uprated once a year to keep in line with price rises . |
29 | ICI stipulates that she must work a certain number of days a year to keep in touch . |
30 | There is less reason to baulk at the term referent , although a referent is , by definition , something outside language , and although we should prefer to speak of syntactic entities in order to keep in harmony with the assumptions we have been following throughout this text ; however the latter are the linguistic correlates of what are perceived as extra-linguistic referents , and the patterns of intensional relations are exactly the same whether there is an external referent or not . |