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

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1 A thorough self-assessment will help you get totally clear in your own mind what you are most suited for and what you actually want .
2 Be clear in your own mind what is involved in the course which you are studying .
3 You have to be quite clear in your own mind who you are aiming this at and how you are actually going to formulate it .
4 I am not entirely clear in my own mind what that last sentence really means , but from what I have written so far you can readily see that the movement towards Euthanasia is to the fore .
5 Although I am not clear in my own mind what " literary " means in the title The Literary Language of Shakespeare ( for it seems to suggest that non-literary language is not included ) it is apparent that Hussey aims to stress the literary rather than the language in his account of Shakespeare .
6 Once I 'm absolutely clear in my own mind I 'll put my plan to you — but here 's the encampment and unless I 'm mistaken that 's Boz coming out to meet us . ’
7 Then her mother would graciously conduct half an hour of polite conversation with all these people , who Jo knew were otherwise pretty cool and mostly also pretty sane , and they would all pretend to be interested in whatever dumb thing she said , and laugh if she made any of her awful little jokes and store away any personal information she disclosed so that they could tell it to their friends the next day and make it absolutely clear that they were on intimate terms with a really big star .
8 You will say I ought to have informed you I would not part with the boy in such circumstances as you had taken trouble to describe but until I saw the girl I was not sure in my own mind what to do and only made it up when confronted with her and not taking to her at all .
9 Once confident in his new power he flew at flagpole height with the greatest of ease .
10 Said Ince : ‘ We 're still confident in our own ability we believe we can put things back to rights . ’
11 At the highest level of society there were the names given to the great tenants-in-chief who held their estates directly of the Conqueror , and it must be remembered that if these magnates were already powerful in their own country they may even have brought locative bynames with them , as was the case of William de Moyon already mentioned .
12 In my spare in my spare time I 'd like to be , like to do dancing and swimming .
13 Although quiet and demure in her first term she was no goody goody .
14 My right hon. Friend referred to the Chancellor 's views but , when we asked him that question in the Select Committee , it became clear that he was not so much against it in principle as uncertain in his own mind what he should do .
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