Example sentences of "[noun pl] [Wh adv] [noun sg] [prep] the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 One of the country 's main routes to the south coast will be affected for months when part of the bridge is rebuilt .
2 He felt that such a clause would be unreasonable , since the ship was likely to break down in circumstances where return to the yard would be impracticable .
3 The floor was a continuous mosaic of eight-sided tiles , the corridor walls were angled to give the corridors eight sides if the walls and ceilings were counted and , in those places where part of the masonry had fallen in , Twoflower noticed that even the stones themselves had eight sides .
4 The great stations stand , if they do still stand , as towering monuments to that belief , public meeting-places where faith in the perfectibility of man by his own ingenuity and the blessing of a divine providence was daily affirmed .
5 [ Article 8 concerned the extension of federal law to the former GDR ; Article 9 concerned exceptions when law of the GDR is to remain valid , and Article 10 concerned the application of the law of the European Communities . ]
6 Burton Property Trust is planning to blitz hundreds of businesses when marketing of the town 's new Cornmill centre gets under way in the next few weeks .
7 The party leadership in Scotland has dismissed that on the grounds that those MPs who are associated with Scotland United represent constituencies where action against the carrying of knives would have the greatest effect .
8 For instance , Milton Friedman gives examples of economies where expansion of the money supply has been followed by inflation .
9 The stock editor system reached a point in some authorities where work on the stock was turned over almost entirely to the ‘ specialist ’ officer , and librarians at service points were denied any real voice in stock provision .
10 The contribution of this to full employment is obvious , particularly at times when demand in the economy is generally low .
11 Part II of the Administration of Justice Act 1969 introduced the procedure universally known as the ‘ leap-frog ’ procedure to deal with those cases where determination by the Court of Appeal might not be the most effective way of disposing of the case .
12 While some may see the whole area of aesthetic response as one limited by hedonism or elitism , or may wish to view it as a superficial frill of little relevance to the real world of materialistic values , others are able to propose valid reasons why investigation into the nature of aesthetic experience should be pursued .
13 By referring to ‘ any proceedings brought because of an alleged odour nuisance ’ it is clear that the Department of Environment did not intend to restrict the occasions when adherence to the code of practice may , at the discretion of the court be a relevant consideration .
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