Example sentences of "[vb -s] in [art] [adj] [noun] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 Part of the answer lies in the managerial perspective itself and another part in the failure to develop a viable approach to the professional dimensions of schools .
2 Throughout the reigns of his son and great-grandson he is referred to as Ring Edward ‘ who lies at Gloucester , but it remains a mystery as to whether the body which lies in the splendid tomb there is his or not .
3 Ultimately the attractiveness of MINIS-type systems to public sector managers lies in the comprehensive picture which they can provide of organizational activities , and also in the potential which they hold for decentralization within departments .
4 It lies in the sporting feelings it draws aht o' people .
5 The common ancestry of the structuralists lies in the theoretical form they construe for the objects they analyse .
6 Their benefit lies in the national standard which they set , the flexibility with which NVQ qualifications can be obtained , and the accurate assessment which is made of the trainee 's ability and competence in the work situation .
7 The reason often lies in an over-eager management who are continually hounding the PRO for more column inches or to keep up with the supposed coverage of competitors .
8 Within easy reach of the town centre and on a frequent bus route , Wexford House stands in a large garden which will afford a pleasant area for future residents .
9 Within each reach of the town centre and on a frequent bus route , Wexford House stands in a large garden which will afford a pleasant area for future residents .
10 For most of them sex happens in the same places it always did .
11 She says in the longer term there are substantial benefits from returning organic matter to the soil .
12 He is now hoping to raise enough money to return to Bosnia to continue his work , and while the thought he had to kill still haunts him he says in the same situation he would not fail to kill again .
13 This results in a cake-like compound which is dried and ground to a fine powder ready for distribution to ready-mix concrete plants . ’
14 This process of looking for individual points of agreement whilst demonstrating diplomatic skills , results in a piecemeal approach which is not targeted to handle or solve any specific problems , but addresses a wide range of problems poorly or inefficiently .
15 Thus suppose a mutation occurs in a complex organism which causes GGC to be translated as proline instead of the usual glycine .
16 This terminates in a cervical groove which is followed in some species by broad cervical alae .
17 The verbal aspect , ‘ resides in the concrete sentences which constitute the text . ’
18 She argues that the attachment between individuals — the relationship — resides in an inner structure which has both cognitive and affective aspects and affects behaviour .
19 Well when he gets in the right places he 's only been doing schools and you know ?
20 It trades in the primal delight which the hills bring ; in their clean innocence and the wonderment they inspire .
21 If a large predatory bird sits in a conspicuous position it may find itself being mobbed by smaller birds , which call , display , and even attempt to dive-bomb it with pecking attacks .
22 He sits in the first pew he comes to and leers at the door every twenty seconds with the frowsiest of sighs .
23 Bisected by the equator , Kenya basks in the intense sunlight which renders this country one of the most dramatically moulded outdoor showpieces to which the world lays claim .
24 When she rises in the white garment she must be terribly dominant .
25 When a crack appears in a strained material it will open up a little so that the two faces of the crack are separated .
26 An injunction that his feast day is to be observed appears in the legal texts which Wulfstan drafted for him , and if the same clause in surviving copies of Æthelred 's laws is a later interpolation , as Patrick Wormald has contended , then Cnut 's interest in Edward , implied by his apparent gift of relics of this saint to Westminster Abbey , would be all the more striking .
27 But when one considers the next two stanzas a flaw appears in the untold simplicity we have followed so far .
28 I am sitting eating cornflakes in the benign haze you are left with from making love before breakfast .
29 The cause of her disadvantage rests in the social arrangements we make , yet there is a tradition of social analysis which attempts to blame the girl for her failure , as if it were simply her responsibility to overcome the conditions of class , race and gender to which she is subject .
30 Peter Schmidt of the Stiftung Wissenschaft Politik at Ebenhausen , a leading expert on European defence and security issues , has identified the formulation of a Common Foreign and Security policy as the product of a ‘ top-down approach ’ which ‘ regards the political union of Western Europe within the framework of the EC as an end in itself ’ , rather than of a ‘ functional or horizontal approach ’ which ‘ asks in a practical way which defence functions can and should be handled in a Western European framework , which ones can remain attached to existing defence arrangements — above all that means Nato — and which ones can stay at the disposal of nation states ’ .
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