Example sentences of "[adv] live [prep] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | She mostly lived in the country and she was rich . |
2 | Then , in 1988 , traces of 10 were found in Vietnam 's Nam Cat Tien swamp , where they presumably lived through the war . |
3 | Many species live , and presumably lived in the past , in inland or upland sites where little sediment accumulates . |
4 | They rarely lived in the countryside , but their investments brought them prestige as well as profits . |
5 | He was also aware that homosexuals in Britain at this time not only lived under the threat of illegality but were also regarded by many as deeply offensive . |
6 | died as , whatever and they went to his eldest brother he said he had to burn all because he only lived in a small flat , he and his wife and two children and they 'd got no room for them to so he had to burn them . |
7 | It worked out and then they only lived in the other half while they were doing it , was n't it ? |
8 | Then , scientists worried that if microbes such as E. coli which naturally lives in the human gut , escaped from a laboratory carrying foreign genes , they could colonise the gut and flood the body with protein . |
9 | She only lives around the corner . ’ |
10 | Some twenty years later the District Judge at Kagalla found similar attitudes : ‘ It is a common occurrence for persons to see an animal being driven away under very suspicious circumstances , and yet , although perhaps living within a stone 's throw of the owner , they take no trouble to go and tell him what they have seen , and probably say nothing about it until they meet him looking for his stolen animal , three or four days afterward ; of course then the recovery is hopeless ! ’ |
11 | Another 17.93 per cent he found to be living in ‘ secondary ’ poverty , i.e. their income was above the minimum but Rowntree 's investigators described them as ‘ obviously living in a state of poverty , i.e. in obvious want and squalor ’ . |
12 | In the same period , kin links were an important mechanism for recruiting labour , and so living in the parental household would have given young people increased chances of finding work , as well as providing them with accommodation which they might not have been able to afford on their own . |
13 | He supported himself by painting the portraits of the distinguished people he met on the way , and in Japan he went off alone to live among the aboriginal Ainu . |
14 | ‘ Better to live in the present , dear , ’ she said , ‘ while you can . |
15 | So , even though I was young and inexperienced , I felt that I could appreciate some of the feelings of men like Captain Robins , and now this strange and kindly doctor , ‘ happily ’ married to a woman rich enough to live in a big house facing Wimbledon Common while he preferred a far-off island ; each partner more in love with a way of life than with one another . |
16 | It is a curious fact that the poor benighted people who were unfortunate enough to live in the rural wetlands did not seem to share the prejudices of their visitors at all . |
17 | I can say this because I am lucky enough to live in the other gulf — the gulf between the personal and the political — that such events open up . |
18 | We have recently had the good fortune to spend an afternoon with the present writer in residence , Joy Hendry , as our visiting speaker , and have savoured but a taste of the feast of enviable experience that she in particular , and others of similar calibre , must have afforded to those lucky enough to live in the Stirling area . |
19 | Enquire about the possibility of donated breast milk from a milk bank — you may be fortunate enough to live in an area where such a bank has been established . |
20 | If you are fortunate enough to live in an area where the local district health authority ( DHA ) has a positive and dynamic recruitment policy , then bridging the gap between jobs will be high on its list of priorities . |
21 | For the rest of us , it has been a matter of being lucky enough to live near a decent State school . |
22 | Each year , Bonfire Night was the highlight of early winter and I was fortunate enough to live within a quarter of a mile of The Greencroft , which became the mecca on November 5th for people from all parts of the City . |
23 | 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 ) . |
24 | Participation could perhaps be increased if the event is planned beforehand ; for example , it might be an advantage if groups of children who all live in the same area arranged to meet and cycle to school together . |
25 | Any actuarial calculation must therefore be discounted to allow for the chance that he may only live for a shorter period . |
26 | Schools were started in the monasteries , for Charles proclaimed that ‘ Men of God should not only live by the rule and dwell in holy conversation , but should devote themselves to literary meditations , each according to his ability , that they may be able to give themselves to the duty of teaching others . ’ |
27 | But the treatment has to be repeated because the Americans transplanted the gene into cells that only live for a few months . |
28 | You see some of them only live in a small cottage with no garden and that 's an extension to their home , you can go down there with the children |
29 | Ghosts only live in the dim light . |
30 | if that was a possibility or if that became a possibility mum only live round the corner . |