Example sentences of "[prep] [verb] in [adj] [noun] [pron] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Without exploring drivers ’ memories for driving in other circumstances it is impossible to know what normal memory performance in driving would be expected to be .
2 Here after living in strict confinement he found himself dining and playing bowls with amiable divines .
3 Now see I 'm looking at this here , right , just for fitting in twelve games I mean , I 'm gon na have to start the first of May .
4 Er it sort of goes in four ways I mean the fathers talk more directly than the mothers whether or not it 's a boy or a girl they 're talking to .
5 Mind you , as that would increase the likelihood of seeing in real life what 's on the cover of Jilly Cooper 's Riders , maybe it would be detrimental to showground safety .
6 The trouble is that having er agreed to a er more flexible approach to the size of the police authority , the Government has not taken the opportunity despite many effective speeches from the Conservative benches at second reading to er ret to return to the tripartite system of policing in this country which was er the e the essential element of the nineteen sixty four Act which is now in effect being replaced .
7 There is a way of proceeding in conceptual matters whose method is to define away any inconvenient difficulty .
8 For a fee , companies can use the facilities here to experiment on improvements to their products without the worry of investing in costly equipment themselves .
9 There are certain fundamental , seemingly inevitable , features of schooling in this society which persist , irrespective of changing aims and resources for education .
10 At a time when HMI and others are prescribing more consultative and collaborative ways of working in primary schools it is appropriate that some research takes place into the kinds of social and communication skills required of teachers .
11 This ‘ immediacy ’ of meaning in oral society he relates to the society 's functional needs , citing Malinowski 's claim that ‘ in the Trobriands the outer world was only named in so far as it yielded useful things ’ ( ibid . ) .
12 However , these immediately familiar accusations against the moral failure of the British people touched on a much wider current of feeling in 1950s Britain which found a crystallising focus in the problems of the younger generation .
13 Children whose parents set firm limits for them grow up with more self-esteem and confidence than those who are allowed to get away with behaving in any way they like .
14 They were also admirably equipped to act as judges in those cases which fell under their purview , although these were concerned largely with disputes involving churchmen .
15 The second part , I thought might be useful to members in explaining in more detail what each of the schemes were about .
16 Thus , the profession was protected against competition from law centres in these matters but was not required to refrain from dealing in those matters which ‘ normally ’ go to law centres .
17 I accept that in arguing in this way one must be aware of the general objections which socialists are likely to raise .
18 It is , therefore , worth exploring in some detail their role .
19 Convector models work by drawing in cold air which is then warmed in a convection-chamber .
20 The cost of interbank deposits is crucial to setting base rates , as additional deposits are obtained by borrowing in this market it can be seen that LIBOR represents the marginal cost of funds to the clearing banks .
  Next page