Example sentences of "to spend a [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 They managed to crawl away from the lava to spend a freezing night on a ledge 150 yards inside the 500ft vent .
2 ‘ I 've got quite a lot of hair but it 's fine so , to make it look good , I need to spend a great deal of effort on it .
3 My wife and I were very happy ; we had a house outside the town , though I had to spend a great deal of time in Berlin .
4 As well as maintaining a good posture , women were expected to move with grace , which was the principal reason for dancing lessons A woman attempting to achieve this ideal of beauty needed to spend a great deal of money , and so labouring class women were automatically excluded , even if they were possessed of ‘ natural ’ beauty .
5 Third on fuel costs , the inquiry is likely to spend a great deal of time looking at coal-price assumptions , because Sizewell would be uneconomic if coal prices do not experience any real increase .
6 The use of the word ‘ lazy ’ here does not imply that those animals are indolent or inefficient but rather that their specialisation is so finely tuned and successful that they are able to spend a great deal of their daily lives sitting , gazing and sleeping .
7 But some in-laws do manage to get along remarkably well together , even when they have to spend a great deal of time in each other 's company .
8 Clara dreaded the vacations , and tried to whittle them down as much as she could , by semi-obligatory study courses , and quasi-essential trips to the continent to learn the languages she was studying , but despite these nibblings and thefts , she still found herself obliged to spend a great deal of time each year in Hartley Road .
9 With the phenomenal explosion of information science in recent years , the vast increase in publishing costs and the reduction in government grants to educational establishments , librarians seem to spend a great deal of their time these days poring over computer print-outs on library utilization , in order to help them decide where to recommend cutbacks in library service ( e. g. shorter opening hours or reduced service from enquiry desks ) .
10 You see I ca n't afford to spend a great deal on anyone this year .
11 The atmosphere here is friendly — an ideal place for Club Couples to spend a relaxing holiday in comfortable surroundings .
12 So for a little over £100 it is easy to spend a long weekend in Paris in the spring , summer or whenever .
13 There really is no better way to spend a long weekend , or indeed an entire week , during winter , than in the warm sun of Portugal 's Algarve , Spain 's Costa del Sol or the cooler — though still very comfortable — French region of Calais .
14 It was a little bit awkward , because she wanted to spend a long weekend there in July , and I had to sort out the dates with Alex to make sure they did n't clash .
15 to develop from a small beginning in manageable steps rather than to spend a long period identifying ‘ all ’ institutional needs and all required data items followed by software development of a ‘ complete ’ system on an unmanageable scale ;
16 ‘ Another thing which caused me to spend a long time on the story was that prostitution is a black and whit story , but the business side of photography usually wants colour .
17 Or , if you like to spend a long time in the tub , you might like a wider one , which may well fit into the existing space .
18 Although the Laputans were kind to me , I did not want to spend a long time in their country .
19 ‘ People have to spend a long time with robot animals first .
20 If I really had to spend a long time hurting someone slowly , I 'd have to use a blindfold : them or me , one of us would have to have their eyes hidden .
21 It is all too easy to spend a back-breaking couple of hours weeding the garden and never take ten minutes to sit and look at the flowers .
22 However , she now found herself losing touch with all reality as Ross , obviously frustrated in his efforts to sort out their air-conditioning and nanny problems , proceeded to spend a small fortune on his wife .
23 Says Bartle : ‘ We demonstrated that you do n't need to spend a vast amount of money for advertising to work and be successful .
24 But when he teamed up with Dave Barnetson and Paul Bowers to spend a testing weekend with the Territorial Army this spring , he was taken to the limit .
25 He wrote : ‘ Her immediate plans are modest : to spend a private weekend in Paris , to take a course in psychology , to learn to play the piano to concert grade and to start painting again .
26 Students can expect to spend a substantial part of their courses doing practical laboratory work .
27 When we got the Hill Farm Subsidy and we were obliged to spend a certain part of it in putting something back in the soil , uncle liked Middleton Lime , so he spread a bit of that around along with basic slag , and cow manure , of course .
28 The wildest approach is the ‘ free hand ’ ; a fund manager agrees to spend a certain amount and buys anything and everything up to that limit .
29 To return to the shareholder example , having raised the point that it is in shareholders ' interests to ensure their returns are reasonable , it logically follows that there will be an incentive for them to spend a certain amount of time and money finding out about the firm 's activities and performance .
30 She was not particularly hungry , but she went down to the hotel 's dining-room around eight that evening , then returned to her room to spend a fitful night .
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