Example sentences of "[vb pp] [adv] in the new [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | The Agency 's Architect has now made his detailed inspection of the buildings and his report is expected early in the new year . |
2 | This design guidance will be published as Supplement M to HPN1 and is expected early in the New Year . |
3 | His own queen , whom Surere had revered so deeply , when she requested that she be buried not in the new City of the Horizon , but near her old home , in the Valley of the Dead across the river from the Southern Capital , had been granted her wish , though it had hurt Akhenaten deeply . |
4 | This contrasts with the normality ratings obtained from Study 3 which were clearly used differently in the new context . |
5 | The monitoring role of the LEA is clearly spelt out in the new legislation . |
6 | Martigues will soon be all but swallowed up in the new harbour constructions planned to stretch west from Marseille . |
7 | We read ‘ Glory in the church ’ ; it 's a phrase that ca n't be found elsewhere in the New Testament ; when the Ephesian Christians heard that phrase when the letter was read out , it probably came as a great surprise . |
8 | A full-time pressure group is likely to be set up in the new year . |
9 | A collection totalling £375 was taken for the work of Christian Aid and CAFOD , and refreshments were served afterwards in the new parish hall . |
10 | But there are several aspects of this prophetic Spirit that are especially important , and they are taken up in the New Testament . |
11 | The pro-Stuart exiles were greatly strengthened early in the new reign by the arrival of two formerly powerful new allies . |
12 | THE glow of recognition will be sweet for those who have been singled out in the New Year Honours list . |
13 | For instance , if support staff can be recruited locally in the new site , firms may restrict eligibility for relocation assistance to senior employees or to those with specialist skills who could not easily be replaced . |
14 | ‘ Speaking generally , ’ Bray wrote in Boy Labour and Apprenticeship ( 1911 ) , ‘ the city-bred youth is growing up in a state of unrestrained liberty ’ , and describing how ‘ the habits of school and home are rapidly sloughed off in the new life of irresponsible freedom ’ he agreed that ‘ the large amount of money he has to spend on himself is by no means an unmixed benefit ’ . |