Example sentences of "in [num] sense [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 In one sense they are the British equivalent of political advertising on American television ‘ but they differ from such advertising in three very important ways : first , PFB broadcasting is free ( although the parties have to bear at least some of the production costs — indeed , all of the production costs if they wish to use private production facilities ) ; second , the number of PEB broadcasts is fixed by agreement between broadcasters and the parties to reflect ( roughly ) the current popular standing of the parties ( in 1987 Labour , the Liberal-SDP Alliance , and the Conservatives got exactly equal time for PEBs while other parties received very much less ) ; third , the broadcasters have insisted , against the politicians ’ wishes , that PEBs be short programmes typically ten minutes long , rather than high-impact adverts of perhaps twenty or thirty seconds ' duration .
2 In one sense they may be regarded as the successors to , sometimes the heirs of , the small- nationality movements directed against the Habsburg , Tsarist and Ottoman empires , that is to say against what were considered historically obsolete modes of political organisation , in the name of a model of political modernity , the nation-state .
3 Where people have value as group members , our lives are not only our own or our immediate families ' ; in one sense they belong to the whole community , therefore each death is a loss to everyone .
4 In one sense it 's very much like good investigative journalism , ’ explains Malcolm Smart , Head of Research at the IS .
5 In Northern Ireland 's divided society therefore , community policing has both a specific and a general meaning , for in one sense it focuses narrowly on overcoming Catholic hostility to the police , while in another the ‘ community ’ which is addressed is defined more broadly to encompass all residents in the province , although often these two aspects intermingle .
6 Perhaps in one sense it does not matter that he ignored the sometimes vandalistic assaults on the gospel texts by Form-critics and Redaction-critics ; just as it could be seen not to matter that the school of philosophy in which he was reared had been rendered more or less obsolete by the man who — in the year that Lewis was writing The Problem of Pain — had become a professor of philosophy at Cambridge : Ludwig Wittgenstein .
7 By the Wittenbergplatz U-Bahn station there is something which looks like a very large public information notice , which in one sense it is , but which is in fact a memorial .
8 In one sense it is paradoxical to talk of fluidity in tenth- or eleventh-century society .
9 In one sense it is simply a matter of keeping the value far ahead of the cost .
10 In one sense it is fragile , for it has the naivety of a child 's game of ‘ let's play house ’ , with a little patch of ground called ‘ home ’ , set out with sticks and stones .
11 In one sense it was an occupation that Joyce had never abandoned , for he had held classes in public speaking for members of the BUF .
12 In one sense it is an optimistic phenomenon .
13 In one sense it is the written version of what they constantly hear — two other people talking perhaps , as in this case , arguing .
14 In one sense it was .
15 If the owner does not resist the taking of his property , or actually hands it over , because of , for example , threats of violence , in one sense it could be said that there is ‘ consent : ’ yet the offence of robbery , as defined in section 8(1) of the Theft Act 1968 , involves , as one of its elements , theft .
16 In one sense it can be argued that generalizations are of little use .
17 In one sense it might also be said to have laboured to produce a mouse .
18 In one sense it 's part of every man 's dream at some time or other — to make for the country and live off and in nature .
19 In one sense it is a simplification , but also it is a clarification which is intended to provide understanding and prediction .
20 It is very true that in one sense it must be implied that although there is no existing difference , still that a difference may arise between the parties : yet I think the distinction between an existing difference and one which may arise is a material one , and one which has properly been relied on in this case …
21 In one sense you could say that we begin our lives in the wheelchair of the womb ; we begin our lives literally by being carried around .
22 I sometimes think , he wrote , that if in one sense I am back in the nursery trying to make a big toy with nothing but wood and string , in another I am back in the classroom fiddling with bunsen burners while Mr Alexander walks round sniffing with his long distinguished nose in the air .
23 So , in one sense I was not starting entirely from scratch .
24 Well in one sense I , I would like to see Jane addressing it , because she can do it from a non-divisional point of view .
25 By the time they met , Leonard was indeed pushing hard at the doors of his own individuality — in one sense he had been doing that for years .
26 In one sense he would be right — the person he had in mind had not arrived .
27 Which was fitting , since in one sense he had created it , had made these folk to people it .
28 > In one sense he accepts the world of the stage , in another he denies it .
29 In one sense he was right ; the trip itself was a wonderful change from her daily routine too .
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