Example sentences of "[adj] to keep in [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Of course , being a boy made it the more difficult , it would not be as easy , but it had begun to seem to her not impossible to keep in touch with Pen wherever he was . |
2 | Royal Mail International Pre-paid Services really do make it easy to keep in touch with your friends and relatives abroad . |
3 | The distinction is not always easy to keep in mind : Lord Denning , Britain 's most experienced judge in defamation cases , published a book in which he criticised a jury in Bristol for acquitting defendants who had been charged with rioting . |
4 | They 're hollow , and because of that they 're hard to keep in tune . |
5 | It was sometimes hard to keep in mind the fact that Kadan was not yet an adult . |
6 | Hopes , plans and pleasant memories are hard to keep in mind , and realistic worries take prominence . |
7 | Before I had really recovered , I found myself at the railway station , where I said goodbye to Dulcie and we went our separate ways , promising to keep in touch , as one does . |
8 | Resolutely she finished the fragrant coffee before phoning Margaret , giving as optimistic a picture of the situation as possible and promising to keep in touch . |
9 | It is well to keep in mind that the purpose of selection is action : what comes next . |
10 | Mark said : ‘ It is important to keep in rhythm when you are training for a race . |
11 | Whether personal counselling takes the form of individual contact or family contact of self-help discussion in groups , it will be important to keep in touch with the notion that there will be stages of recovery , just as in the mourning process . |
12 | It is important to keep in mind that being HIV positive does not necessarily mean that you will develop AIDS , or that you will die immediately . |
13 | It is also important to keep in mind that both the objective and subjective dimensions of the disability/ageing career will be shaped by race and gender . |
14 | And to add to her joy , Hilda took her to meet sister Lena as the two had been able to keep in touch . |
15 | When , eventually , Lear was forced through ill health and exhaustion to exchange England and ‘ the old Enemy , lithography ’ for a life of watercolour painting in Rome , he was desperate to keep in touch with old acquaintances . |
16 | It is essential to keep in touch with the latest books and reading tastes , but it is also important to be aware of the cultures of the home and the community , of young people 's television viewing and cinema habits and tastes , the range of musical interests , dress preferences , current hobbies , sports , and pastimes , and the toys and play activities in fashion . |
17 | It is essential to keep in mind the kind of healthy look you are aiming for , as well as your goal for weight . |
18 | We are fit as two fiddles in a ceilidh bank with all this exercise and will no doubt have to pick fights with Big to keep in trim on our return . |
19 | It was very difficult to keep in working order , and when the emperor Charles V saw it in Pavia in 1529 it needed repair . |
20 | George Wigg was a remarkable man but very difficult to keep in check . |
21 | It 's difficult to keep in touch with friends and I know I ca n't go wild socially . |
22 | It 's difficult to keep in touch with friends and I know I ca n't go wild socially . |
23 | erm Yes , I mean it seems very difficult to keep in touch with exactly what is happening because of the communication blackout , but erm from what we 're hearing erm obviously there is still a lot more mileage in this conflict it seems to me . |
24 | This form of association is quite fascinating but not easily replicated in the aquarium as diadema urchins are notoriously difficult to keep in captivity . |
25 | Are you , you keen to keep in touch keep , keep coming to the meetings or ? |
26 | It is also necessary to keep in mind the historical dimensions to these issues . |