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

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1 It is difficult to put forward a programme which holds out hope of a better life when you have singularly failed to live up to your promises during your term of office .
2 CONTINUING HIS LOOK AT HOW TO USE IMAGES IN YOUR DOCUMENTS , JOHN BENNETT CHECKS OUT SONE OF THE BEST PC DRAWING PACKAGES AND EXPLAINS WHY YOU DO N'T HAVE TO BE MICHELANGELO TO USE THE .
3 And deals out Pleasure with a scanty Hand ;
4 Whenever Marx or Freud or any other thinker is used in such a way as an authority of revealed truth , then the community of sociologists opens up discussion on the basic aspects of the theory .
5 Initiated by the CBSO under its electrifying young conductor , Simon Rattle , it will soon receive another boost , when Sadler 's Wells Ballet takes up residence in the refurbished Hippodrome under its new name , the Birmingham Royal Ballet .
6 Hence if the construction of the building which is to be the catering premises shuts out light to the adjoining premises it thereby infringes the rights of the neighbours and gives rise to a cause of action for contravention of their easement of light .
7 Right : Mazda 's modern-styled Approach Light picks up movement in a wide detection zone , and has an economical five minute switch off delay
8 She picks up speed in the late evening , after most of the passengers have eaten .
9 Joseph Kahl , in his attempt to measure modernism , picks out participation in the mass media as one of his key criteria of the modern .
10 A young red deer puts on weight at a considerable rate during its first summer , but its growth is reduced to less than half of this rate during the winter .
11 Anyway , one of them escapes and sets up home in an abandoned but working car-wash in Hayes , Middlesex , while the rest die of starvation in the internment cells . "
12 Therefore , if a bookmaker pays out money in the mistaken belief that a certain horse has won , s.5(4) is inappropriate .
13 If a company hires out equipment for a given time on payment of a fixed fee , its profit derives from the contract of hire and not from its continued forbearance from seeking to recover that equipment during the contract period .
14 The extension of the LFA has left this gross anomaly unaffected since it brings in land at the lower elevations outside the original LFA boundary .
15 The definition of " new tenant or occupier " is discussed in Chief Constable of Tayside v. Angus District Licensing Board , 1980 S.L.T. ( Sh.Ct. ) 31 where it is held that " new " refers to both tenant and occupier and that at 32 " we are dealing with the removal of the licensee , when he yields up possession to a new tenant or a new occupier/occupant " .
16 Parents opening accounts will find that The Royal Bank of Scotland 's Rainbow Savings account comes out top of the major high street banks , paying 8.25 per cent net , followed by the Bank of Scotland 's Supersaver at 7.82 per cet .
17 Parents opening accounts will find that The Royal Bank of Scotland 's Rainbow Savings account comes out top of the major high street banks , paying 8.25 per cent net , followed by the Bank of Scotland 's Supersaver at 7.82 per cent .
18 Parents opening accounts will find that The Royal Bank of Scotland 's Rainbow Savings account comes out top of the major high street banks , paying 8.25 per cent net , followed by the Bank of Scotland 's Supersaver at 7.82 per cent .
19 Unit trusts are regulated by the Life Assurance and Unit Trust Regulatory Organisation ( LAUTRO ) and the Investment Management Regulatory Organisation ( IMRO ) , and they have a Unit Trust Association ( UTA ) which carries out supervision on an informal basis , and is more of a lobbying body on behalf of the unit trust industry .
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