Example sentences of "[adv] [adj] [verb] [adv prt] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Bigger country , not one tight little prejudiced clapped out topheavy society , less breathing down one 's neck .
2 And they 're much easier to pick up that way .
3 She also says : ‘ … where people have been in the habit of reaching out towards the Unseen they wear a kind of track , and it 's much easier to go out that way . ’
4 Remember , do n't try to fly too close to the ground : 5 to 10 feet is quite all right and will make it much easier to smooth out any pitching which occurs before you have had time to get used to the light controls .
5 Benhabyles , as chair of the Constitutional Council , should have assumed interim presidential powers in the absence of a Speaker of the National Assembly , but was apparently unwilling to take on this responsibility , under which he would have been obliged to organize presidential elections within 45 days .
6 And then you wo n't need so many pulling out next time .
7 It is the main reason why it is taking so long to get round this course .
8 Improved diet would have reduced death rates primarily because well fed people are better able to fight off infectious disease .
9 For a moment Merrill wondered if her description had hurt him , but his expression was sufficiently aloof to bounce off any information he did not wish to hear .
10 The list is longer , but what I am getting at is that it is going to be extremely expensive to cut down this pollution .
11 The toffs are no longer willing to crawl about all day in the wilds .
12 It is also more dense than a normal lining and is thus able to cut out more light .
13 It felt painfully difficult to hew out another course .
14 He sat in silence as she worked , and for that , at least , she was grateful , knowing it would be well-nigh impossible to carry on any kind of sane conversation right now .
15 The interview need not be long but Sheila will have discovered that there are people who will listen and she is now more likely to take up any referral she is given for more long term counselling .
16 It seems that these obligations were found more likely to stir up serious friction within families than to rally family help .
17 But the strategy of working alongside is more likely to bring about significant change in professional thinking and classroom practice , because the partners have no alternative but to confront questions of planning and organization , and hence to explore each other 's ideas .
18 It is , therefore , all the more important to round off this discussion of the privileging of the gaze by looking at the work of critics who positioned themselves outside the psychoanalytical framework .
19 Even when children care desperately for their elderly parents and have to put them in a home because of lack of personal resources , they are not always able to keep up regular contact because of moving to find employment .
20 I have canvassed the views of my hon. Friend the Minister for Local Government and Inner Cities who is very European , and he assures me that people who live in the southern part of Spain were totally bemused to wake up one day and find themselves in an invented region called Andalusia with a different Government from than in Madrid .
21 It is also important to carry out regular water changes — do n't forget to make adjustments with additional salt .
22 But it is also necessary to link up these instruction words with other aspects of questions .
23 At this point it is probably wise to seek out each leader and discuss their organisations with them .
24 We would be most unwise to take on this role in the current economic climate .
25 Of the thirty six guests , about half change over each week .
26 This in itself is highly significant , particularly since many New Testament scholars seem to believe that the early Christians had no sense of historical propriety and would be perfectly happy to dream up some saying and attribute it to Jesus , or to listen to a message from one of the Christian prophets in the congregation , and then put that into the mouth of the historical Jesus .
27 The British regarded it as essential to win over Arab opinion by promising postwar independence for Syria and Lebanon ; de Gaulle regarded this as British colonialist meddling in French affairs , and when the British tried to issue a declaration promising independence in their own name as well as Free France 's , he objected that the future of French mandates was none of Britain 's business .
28 On the motorway the Safrane rides excellently and is well able to flatten out long amplitude undulation while being equally successful at suppressing smaller bumps , such as expansion joints .
29 I 'm fine , ’ Laura mumbled , so used to silence first thing in the morning that she was finding it incredibly difficult to carry on any form of conversation .
30 IT WAS ALMOST possible to put off those home thoughts as an expatriate Englishman in Ceylon in January 1914 .
  Next page