Example sentences of "[coord] [adv] of [art] [noun pl] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Only a dozen or so of the creeps in the black nighties , but they 've got heavy weapons .
2 The price for the shares must be paid out of distributable profits or out of the proceeds of a fresh issue of shares made for the purpose of the buy-back ( s160(1) ( a ) ) .
3 And quite often those events are completely beyond the control of the child himself , or even of the adults around him .
4 He argued that social , political and bureaucratic elites have their own sources of political power which allow them to act relatively autonomously or independently of the requirements of capital .
5 Both these theories rely on the individuating properties of place , without however offering a satisfactory clarification of the concept of place , or indeed of the origins of the idea of numerical identity .
6 The others did not find it necessary , in reaching their decision that Reg. v. Guest , Ex parte Anthony and Reg. v. Gore Justices , Ex parte N. ( An Infant ) had been wrongly decided , to pronounce upon the correctness or otherwise of the decisions in Rex v. Sheridan and Rex v. Grant .
7 However , the committee , which eventually divided on party lines , defined its terms of reference at the outset so narrowly that it effectively ruled out any possibility of discovering the truth or otherwise of the allegations of malpractice that had been made against the police .
8 ( d ) It is the overprovision of the specific facilities of the kind to be provided and not of the types of licence with which this ground is concerned .
9 It may well be that the gum that surrounds the seeds of these species of Parkia and not of the seeds of the Palaeotropical ones is important here .
10 The person to be interviewed should be given some indication of the topic and possibly of the kinds of questions they might be asked but it is important that there should not be any rehearsal of the interview as they will then lose their spontaneity .
11 Well as you approach the site from D er from north on the A Nineteen , you can catch glimpses of and also of the houses to the south of Church Lane ,
12 His performance was intended as a celebration of that renaissance , and also of the prospects for world peace : for in Moscow Comrade Gorbachev and President Reagan were holding a summit meeting which promised to bear fruit in disarmament .
13 There were many fans who drifted in and out of the groups without making any sequential progress at all and the groups to the left of the terrace always provided for an escape from the soccer ‘ rat race ’ .
14 road and the line nearer to you is solid , you must not cross or straddle it , except when you need to get in and out of the premises on side road .
15 To the south is the endlessly fascinating sight of trains pulling in and out of the platforms of London Bridge station .
16 Within this group are the ‘ problem families ’ , always on the edge of pauperism and crime , riddled with mental and physical defects , in and out of the Courts for child neglect , a menace to the community of which the gravity is out of all proportion to their numbers .
17 Some of the tunnels must have run for miles , winding in and out of the channels of water that threaded everywhere .
18 She walked slowly from the school , across the playground and out of the gates into Latimer Road .
19 The nuclear workers ' cars swept in and out of the gates at each shift without a cursory nod .
20 And out of the mists of prehistory stepped Homo Guinnessens , or Pro-Guinness Man , and the search for the Perfect Pint began .
21 As you might expect , though , it is difficult to stop the loss of energy and plasma along the magnetic lines of force and out of the ends of these machines .
22 In the second phase the promise of semiology as a method of decoding significant structures is put aside in favour of an account of a discourse wherein meaning is elucidated by moving in and out of the contexts of utterances .
23 It is unhelpful if Ministers or others speaking on the right hon. Gentleman 's behalf suggest that internment will not be used or that it is not a viable and justifiable means of dealing with those whose training and speciality is keeping themselves out of the courts and out of the hands of those on whom we depend to impose justice for the deaths that have occurred in Northern Ireland .
24 It makes me cough a bit because when I came on the scene he was the one academically everything and she was the one who was academically rather disadvantaged but she , she was , you know , no not having the greatest of , of , of success but erm it was said that she would n't be able to be a student nurse because she was n't bright enough but you know she clocked up the O levels and A levels like guide badges and she went off on this pre-nursing course in South Notts you know and she was in and out of the Queens on a course and people and , you know , and she said I do n't know all the answers but I 've a rough idea about some of the questions , I want to be a nurse and off she went to , to , to Walsall and I 'm not saying she 's a brilliant student nurse but erm absolutely clear that she 's better than some of the others .
25 They went slowly along the foot of the bank , pushing in and out of the clumps of red campion and ragged robin .
26 Williams himself — a miner 's son — had found his way out of Wales and out of the pits via a schoolteacher , a woman , on whom he had based his hit play , The Corn Is Green .
27 Though she wanted to run , she forced herself to walk , with what she could only hope was regal grace , past Matthew and out of the confines of that cupboard .
28 Gesner had flirted with her quite outrageously during the dinner ( more champagne ) and had made no secret of his intense interest in her life , and particularly of the men in her life .
29 For all patients with Zollinger-Ellison sydrome and independently of the groups to which they belonged , the mean fundic argyrophil cell density was significantly higher in women than in men , p<0.05 ( Table III ) .
30 But many archbishops were delighted by the excuse to go on pilgrimage to Rome ; and one of the first to benefit from the custom was Sigeric , archbishop of Canterbury ( 990 — 4 ) , who has left us a kind of diary of his visit — first of the churches in Rome which a pilgrim had especially to visit and to pray in , and then of the stages on his long journey back to Canterbury .
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