Example sentences of "[adj] [to-vb] [pron] [noun sg] on the " in BNC.

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1 Plastic card investment : Barclays Bank looks set to tighten its stranglehold on the processing of plastic card transactions and will invest more than £22.5m in the service .
2 But Cuckney does not find it easy to put his finger on the fundamental differences between operating in the two sectors .
3 I thought it was appropriate to put my neck on the line with the trade and say , ‘ I think this guy is really great and has got what it takes to be the next Lena Kennedy ’ .
4 First , instead of being content to rest his case on the distinction between commonsense and scientific language , he insisted that certainties in science , having once been established , should be regarded as aids in biblical exegesis .
5 Not content to rest his case on the prudence with which the Holy Spirit had left astronomy out of the Scriptures , he proceeded to show that the miracle of Joshua 's long day made more sense if the text was read from a Copernican standpoint .
6 However , on the whole , English teachers at this time were content to defend their discipline on the grounds of its singular capacity to provide those " human " values upon which the idea of a liberal education depended , and to present science and technology as merely an aspect of that mechanical world against which the " battle of culture " needed to be pitched .
7 This is likely to be your most fertile day , as it is not unusual to detect your surge on the first day of testing .
8 Perhaps it was because I found it hard to define his place on the island .
9 The local trade unionists were quick to give their verdict on the SDLP and the document drawn up after the meeting stated :
10 A mistress too ill to keep her eye on the books !
11 Dostoevsky followed the trial proceedings closely , and I think the Soviet editor is right to put his finger on the verb tolkatsya , to loaf or lounge about , which occurs in a speech by the prosecuting lawyer .
12 The Gulf crisis illustrated the continuing implacable hostility between Cuba and the USA , as the former attempted to use its position on the UN Security Council to impede the US-led campaign against Iraq [ see pp. 37695 ; 37870 ] .
13 At this stage it 's good to get your balance on the skis by jumping up on both skis together and ‘ stepping ’ — lifting first one ski and then the other .
14 Indeed , we might even be inclined to suggest that third parties that are buoyant in the opinion polls , and have a diffuse appeal beyond specific regions , are only able to sustain their support on the basis of an attractive ambiguity about their main policy objectives that precludes the presentation of crisp programmes and , therefore , the possibility of programmatic support .
15 In reciprocation , Glaswegians roll the name Dziekanowski off the end of their tongues with ease , happy to acknowledge his impact on the city and keen to extend the warmest of welcomes .
16 In recent years , the Conservative government in Britain has increasingly been able to impose its agenda on the nationalized industries , including the railways .
17 As an American commentator put it , ‘ a duchess abdicates when her son comes to his title ; she is turned out of the mansion where she once presided … ’ especially through this single-minded concentration of resources through inheritance on a principal heir that the English aristocracy were able to tighten their grip on the land .
18 Bateman was unable to put his name on the League scorers ' list in spite of 32 appearances but he did get an important goal for Palace that season .
19 He is also concerned about being unable to control their value on the open market , with individuals making money out of what had originally been a means of raising money for charity .
20 Laura was unable to have her transplant on the NHS so Fran and Les launched an appeal which raised the £350,000 needed to pay for the operation in the US .
21 you will be able to place your hand on the door-knob in the dark pretty accurately .
22 It was also discovered at Warwick that , if we dislike an aroma , we are able to block its effect on the central nervous system .
23 After this , Michael was able to resume his work on the government review , and we looked forward to his retirement when his review was completed .
24 In October 1974 Labour won only a small majority of seats but that majority had disappeared by 1976 , because a number of minor nationalist parties were able to maximize their effect on the electoral system by virtue of their votes being concentrated into a limited number of constituencies , and because by-elections were lost .
25 An army of Slaanesh worshippers would be available to impose his will on the leaderless Elves .
26 Man was only as good as the tools he had available to impress his will on the environment , Heinz suggested .
27 who are inclined to impose their choice on the bride and groom in a lot of cases ?
28 The research aims to investigate the effect of new development on the housing market and in particular to evaluate its impact on the price structure of specific property types .
29 Its characteristics are personal acquisitiveness , set free by generous tax cuts for the rich and a licensed pursuit of the fast buck ; markets , including foreign exchange , left unfettered to bestow their dynamism on the economy ; a state rolled as far back as is electorally tenable ; and a participatory capitalism , based on profit rather than ownership , where almost anything is a commodity to be traded .
30 The government was anxious to maintain its hold on the energy industry while a national energy plan was being drawn up for 1992 and with a post-1992 liberalization of the power supply market in mind .
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