Example sentences of "[vb -s] [adv prt] [prep] [art] [noun pl] of " in BNC.

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1 Exploring Hidden Processes : what goes on in the heads of pupils doing simple addition calculations ?
2 There are many who are surprised to discover that the words you see before you have been brought to you with little electronic influence beyond that which goes on within the brains of the writer and reader .
3 However we feel that it is important that each type of service debates the issues fully , in order to reach a realistic agreed policy , which also fits in with the policies of other local services .
4 I look forward especially to a future opportunity to develop his views on the desirability of keeping national insurance contributions as low as possible and of working out exactly how that fits in with the policies of some of his right hon. and hon. Friends , but that is for another occasion , Madam Deputy Speaker .
5 This winsome description fits in with the descriptions of the messianic age in the book of Isaiah , with the wolf lying down with the lamb , the lion and the ox eating straw together , and the little child playing happily and fearlessly with them and even putting its little hand unhurt into the hole of the poisonous viper .
6 All of which fits in with the differences of stomach contents with which we began .
7 We follow our own way , the way which fits in with the conditions of our time and our country . ’
8 For now , 16 years later , and with two children aged seven and nine , she is running , from her Croydon home , a thriving sole practice that fits in with the demands of a young family .
9 Yes , I spoke to Mo Magill , he 'll see us tomorrow morning , we 'll fly up on the shuttle , I do n't know what we 'll get , but … and I 've got a line into St Louis : there 's a thing called the Western Manuscripts collection at UMSL — ghastly word , but they use it themselves , it means University of Missouri-St Louis — that latches on to the papers of operations like CCOAC , and they 've got them .
10 Although the scheme seemed to be quietly dropped after the outcry about separating sheep from goats , in essence it lingers on in the policies of the Universities Funding Council ( UFC ) .
11 History lives on in the towns of Framlingham and Orford each with its own splendid medieval castle .
12 Koresh lives on in the hearts of such Branch Davidians as survived .
13 In front of me , the noble tradition lives on in the hands of a middle-aged commuter who , peering intently into his 101 Puzzles and Games for Boys , is joining up the dots incorrectly .
14 The union , he says , ‘ is an idea that lives on in the minds of our workers and their children ’ .
15 But the more one looks at the character of the prison population the more one is struck by the magnifying mirror that it holds up to the inequalities of our society .
16 , John ( fl. 1649 ) , radical pamphleteer , stands out among the polemicists of the civil war period as an advanced thinker on constitutional law and theory with a talent for vivid prose .
17 He stands and looks out over the lights of London .
18 He glances back at the stones of the air shaft .
19 By this process control passes out of the hands of the inefficient management team to those who are able to utilise the company 's assets at a level closer to their true potential .
20 At the beginning we are confronted by a huge battle which leads on to the deaths of loyal knights .
21 Andrea Stuart tunes in to the rhythms of black history with Toni Morrison ; Carol Rumens glimpses the glamour of old Russia with Tatyana Tolstaya ; D J Taylor listens to the rural English past with Adam Thorpe
22 The grounds lie at the foot of the south Antrim hills , and the land fronting the main buildings slopes down to the shores of Belfast Lough .
23 The grounds lie at the foot of the south Antrim hills , and the land fronting the main buildings slopes down to the shores of Belfast Lough .
24 It is built up as it ‘ gathers up from the influences of the environment the demands which that environment makes upon the ego and which the ego can not always rise to … . ’
25 Unfortunately , much of the opium produced by the plants ends up in the bloodstreams of drug addicts .
26 STEPPING OUT The Director of SHIRLEY VALENTINE teams up with the stars of EDUCATING RITA and CABARET
27 It has stuck to an antiquated way of operating that harks back to the days of guild power , and has refused to countenance criticism .
28 a rather simple girl who hangs about on the outskirts of a village …
29 It was a lot of work for one man , he told me , which is why the name Hugh Cruttwell always turns up on the credits of his movies .
30 That ties in with the findings of a remarkable researcher .
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