Example sentences of "[noun sg] [vb -s] [adv prt] in [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Such research is necessary for understanding the mental processes involved in object recognition ; how object recognition may develop ; and , how such recognition breaks down in certain cases of brain damage . |
2 | I listen to it quite often ( not this week though ) but I thought maybe someone could get on ( after we beat Blackburn ! ! ! ) and go National about the net ( especially if the piece comes out in square ball ) . |
3 | The Gujerati community is fully aware of cases like that of Mrs X. Scandals such as hers are everybody 's business , but while in India or East Africa such situations would not have been tolerated , and sons would be forced to take their mothers back , in Britain the community looks on in fascinated horror but does nothing . |
4 | Even when as in the Act 2 aria for Medea 's servant , Neris , he attempts a flowing canzonetta and decks it with a distinctive bassoon obligato , he lets the number go on far too long , or so it seems when as here the bassoon roars out in determined competition with the mezzo , Claire Powell . |
5 | Even when as in the Act 2 aria for Medea 's servant , Neris , he attempts a flowing canzonetta and decks it with a distinctive bassoon obligato , he lets the number go on far too long , or so it seems when as here the bassoon roars out in determined competition with the mezzo , Claire Powell . |
6 | This is not only quicker than casting stitches off in small groups but it also gives a neat edge without the stepped edge that usually occurs . |
7 | The night creeps by in restless anticipation of the morning . |
8 | That constancy of composition relationship breaks down in enclosed seas and bays for example where er addition processes , I E er salts which have been eroded from river water , may alter the composition . |
9 | So the same topic comes up in different forms in different soap operas . |
10 | How well a foreigner gets on in Italian football , he thinks , depends on his own attitude . |
11 | At the top of the screen blinks the word ’ menu ’ and beneath this list winks out in blinding-white neon letters on the black display- keyboards , horns , endless types of drums . |
12 | This means that the painting changes slightly when seen from different angles and the title over the central image flashes up in iridescent colours . |
13 | These optical systems work well , though the accuracy falls off in poor light and when the subject is dark in tone or lacking in contrast . |
14 | As your plane touches down in historic Aberdeen , the stress and strain of the city become a distant memory … |
15 | On reaching the city centre the generator goes off and the bus runs on in virtual silence . |
16 | But as the Duke cross-examines Mariana , Lucio 's natural licentiousness comes out in bawdy jokes ( 179ff. ) , for which he is silenced . |
17 | The doyen of insider trading may be a shadow of his former power after paying fines of $100million and spending two years in prison , but his legacy lives on in criminal trials on both sides of the Atlantic . |