Example sentences of "[v-ing] [adv] [noun] [unc] [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Paying 1% to intermediaries bringing in clients ' money to its lump-sum only Tessas , Save & Prosper ensures loyalty by imposing a £50 transfer fee .
2 British Rail was ruling out King 's Cross at that stage , yet two or three years later BR tells us that King 's Cross is essential .
3 IT IS impossible to understand the Victorian age without understanding why Darwin 's theory of the origin of species was so disturbing ; and perhaps it is equally impossible to understand the argument over evolution without learning why it was so fiercely resisted , by scientists as well as laymen .
4 People have been scrambling up Cust 's Gully for over 100 years , and in dry conditions it should pose no problems — although it is not particularly attractive and I only included it because it was such a traditional route .
5 Again , the grant consolidated existing ducal interests , rounding out Gloucester 's influence in the honour of Pickering further east .
6 Again , the grant consolidated existing ducal interests , rounding out Gloucester 's influence in the honour of Pickering further east .
7 At Christmas he had insisted on hanging up Robert 's stocking on the end of his bed , and had suggested the two of them visit the Cranborne School carol service .
8 ‘ Farrar was the first real researcher into the history of teaching the deaf , and unearthed many previously unknown items of literature about the deaf and was largely responsible for building up Oxley 's Library of the Deaf ( this Library was largely fragmented after Oxley 's death , and many rare articles and books disappeared ) .
9 R. R. Dale 's ( 1969 , 1971 , 1974 ) three-volume study focuses mainly on the social advantages , and it is possible in any case to challenge the nature of the superior social development of girls which is argued to accompany mixed rather than single-sex schooling , since one of the things it may involve is breaking down girls ' resistance to the imposition of various stereotypes of femininity to a greater extent than is found in single-sex schools .
10 Gabby came bowling down Jim 's driveway in a truck .
11 She ought to unpack , but she only got as far as getting out Ricky 's photograph in its blue silk frame and putting it beside the bed .
12 It wrote to a number of firms pointing out Derry 's potential for industrial development .
13 For my part I would have to decide how much I could tell her without giving away Neil 's presence on Moila .
14 Aggregating together union and non-union wages and substituting out firms ' demand for labour , one may obtain a reduced real wage equation positively related to output , lagged real wages and employer taxes on labour and negatively to unexpected inflation benefits and employee taxes .
15 For managers , this path means continually retraining employees for more complex tasks ; automating in ways that cut routine tasks and enhance worker flexibility and creativity ; diffusing responsibility for innovation ; taking seriously labor 's concern for job–security ; and giving workers a stake in improved productivity through profit-linked bonuses and stock plans .
16 It examines the considerable difficulties , both intellectual and practical , of taking seriously HMI 's view of the curriculum as needing to be broad , balanced and coherent .
17 By taking seriously Eliot 's debt to the French symbolistes ( as before him only Allen Tate had done , in The New Republic , 30 June 1926 ) , Wilson was still stressing Eliot 's Americanness by showing at any rate how un-British he was .
18 This is a weighty , passionate document mapping out China 's occupation of Tibet and human rights abuses therein .
19 She devotes the major part of the book to showing how psychology 's view of children has become more rounded .
20 Even leaving aside Ross 's anger at not being consulted about such an important decision , it would be irresponsible to put her own needs and desires above those of the children .
21 Leaving aside Bevan 's conception of the " true " representative , it is not clear in what sense a Burkean representative is a representative at all .
22 Setting out Labour 's case for international co-operation to strengthen world security and combat environmental degradation , Mr Kinnock said : ‘ It is an argument for global citizenship — a recognition of the fact that in the world now and for the future , passive co-existence is not enough .
23 ‘ It 'll cost , ’ said Lloyd , weighing up Tel 's wallet with his X-ray vision .
24 She was continuously anxious lest Mitzi upset coffee all over them both — the coffee-cups being very small , and seeming almost doll 's size in Mitzi 's hands .
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