Example sentences of "[noun pl] [adv] [vb base] [prep] [art] [noun pl] " in BNC.
Previous page Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
31 | The best undergraduate studies usually come from the students who can see the possible application of a theory or concept to a specific empirical example . |
32 | Both are large enough to carry dense plumage and subcutaneous fat ; both are hunters of other birds and small mammals , and ravens also scavenge on the leavings of other species , including man . |
33 | Problems also exist with the rules of copyright deposit . |
34 | Alf Dean , Rekord 's general manager , says two problems regularly occur with the choppers . |
35 | But the new sport means that areas once only accessible by foot , are now on the cyclists route and as walkers and horse riders now vye with the bikers for the limited open space . |
36 | Millions of small birds now sing in the hedges and spinneys . |
37 | In general , the suggested homolgies usually start from the structures found in the Thysanuran genitalia and depend also on evidence from postembryonic developments , the structure of gynandromorphs , and the anatomical relations , musculature and innervation of the various parts . |
38 | Norwegian pine is mentioned , and Eliot 's voyagers also end among the ice-floes , among polar bears . |
39 | Sows in stalls often go through the motions of nest-building , nosing and pawing the floor . |
40 | Swollen , inflamed parotids ; sub-mandibular glands too — they may be stony hard with a sensation of tension or pressure around them ; pains often shoot into the ears on swallowing ; dry rough throat with difficulty swallowing especially hot things ; pale face and skin . |
41 | This can mean that a subscriber can be charged far more than he should be and I gather that some regions even add in the hours that trainee engineers work as well . |
42 | The gutter channel and fittings simply clip into the brackets . |
43 | Players just go through the motions and their lack of pleasure is conveyed to the crowds . |
44 | On a remote beach on the western coast , the last survivors of one of Hong Kong 's rarest marine creatures still come into the shallows to breed . |
45 | The citations also refer to the provisions on which the measure is based . |
46 | A lot of a lot er of members who actually live in the flats , and all of our members practically know about the flats , and the the general impression is that they are a in a way a a a friendly and er a community type place . |
47 | The people in many isolated farms and villages also benefit from the tourists . |
48 | One could almost say that the second scenes really belong to the interludes which precede them though in the final act Britten adds to Grimes 's last monologue a reprise of the first interlude , whose function is to close out the musical form of the opera as a whole . |
49 | The priorities that produce the recall of particular themes doubtless relate to the histories of the persons concerned . |
50 | On average we have had 35 family members and 30 juniors , but because of the difficulty of ‘ policing ’ the courts we believe that at least twice that number of juniors actually play on the courts without paying a subscription ( members get a key , but juniors let their friends in ) . |
51 | Any comment made about the sub-standard display of the opposition against Rangers can be misinterpreted as an implication that the champions occasionally thrive on the shortcomings of others . |
52 | Returning now to that day in 1811 , the hair-raising events of those next few hours graphically unfold through the words of the voyagers themselves , taken from a contemporary account in The Gentleman 's Magazine : |
53 | These three disciplines sometimes relate to the objects of study ( physical , biological , human , etc. ) in the lowly status of ‘ service courses ’ , in which they play a limited functional role ( statistics for social scientists , computing for chemists , languages for management students ) . |
54 | The other five millions include the labourers and less skilled workers , male and female , whose maximum wages only suffice for the necessities and barest decencies of existence , and for whom therefore any mischance means penury , passing swiftly into pauperism . ’ |
55 | The paper was prompted by the Law Society 's concern over the increasing cost of defaults — it estimates that claims against its compensation fund will reach £20m annually , mainly attributed to defaults of sole practitioners ( defaults within partnerships usually fall on the solicitors ' indemnity fund ) . |
56 | This was built in the 1550s for the Dryden family , but some of the banks and ditches still remain in the fields opposite the Hall . |
57 | Most elite theorists also point to the limits imposed upon the freedom of choice of the non-elite through the perpetration by elites of a stratified and inegalitarian access to social , economic , bureaucratic and political resources . |
58 | The reasons for the ultimately poor response from architects probably stem from the conditions . |
59 | From around the age of two years , young children also ask for the names of things . |
60 | However , it must be remembered that these points also lie on the boundaries of adjacent polygons . |