Example sentences of "brings [adv prt] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 His description of the anxiety he is suffering suggests Cowper 's later experience of madness , when the nightmares of waking and sleeping states merge indistinguishably ; and his mental state brings on a sensation of alternating extremes of temperature :
2 Sweats on forehead and every draught of air chills and brings on a headache .
3 Catarrhal , congestive headaches from cold air which clears the nose and brings on a headache ( like Kali bich ) .
4 [ Her anger brings on an attack which in turn brings on the birth pangs .
5 [ Her anger brings on an attack which in turn brings on the birth pangs .
6 The hyperventilation brings on the symptoms , but the patient perceives them as a consequence of the food or chemical — so the pattern of behaviour is reinforced .
7 It is seldom lack of ability that brings down a student who genuinely wishes to succeed .
8 Yet he stressed the importance of middle-class religion and family life to the monarchy 's health : ‘ A family on the throne brings down the pride of sovereignty to the level of petty life . ’
9 Then come two much appreciated encores , of which the second , Wien , du Stadt meiner Träume , brings down the house — and quite right too .
10 In fact , it brings down the curtain not only on his role but on ITV 's epic struggle to match BBC in the sporting field .
11 The closing of a station intangibly but significantly diminishes the spiritual life of a country and its people , for it brings down the curtain with devastating finality on a stage which has seen a thousand dramas , comic and tragic , played out and has mirrored the changing moods of the nation , has etched itself into the working lives of some , the emotional lives of others .
12 PROMOTER Brian Snagg brings down the curtain on the dinner/boxing season at the Devonshire House Sporting Club tomorrow night .
13 One travel company alone brings in a coach tour from the Midlands every fortnight .
14 Arthur Andersen established the Japanese International Network , serving Japanese-based companies in other countries , in 1983 , and also has its own inhouse operation in Japan itself , which is known as Inoue Saita Eiwa and brings in a fee income of around Y20.5bn a year .
15 Donor plea brings in a crowd !
16 Now the firm brings in a designer to improve their image and as a result better fonts and more variation are required so the printer is either upgraded to or replaced by a PostScript device .
17 This theory brings in the element of comparison such that an individual will compare his/her ratio of input ( effort ) to output ( pay ) with a similar ratio for some other relevant person .
18 This framework brings in the concepts of ego , super-ego , id , and the repressed , which had always been used in Freud 's system before the advent of the ego , super-ego , id , model .
19 Turning up the Drive then brings in the overdrive effect and is certainly flexible — none of this ″either on or off″ syndrome .
20 In the few cases just seen where the to infinitive denotes an action , it also brings in the nuance of subsequence , of sudden movement from one instant to the next .
21 Dr Runcie , the well known Archbishop , found himself in terrible trouble when he obviously betrayed his feeling that the Argentinians were human brings in the Falklands memorial service .
22 ( She brings in the food . )
23 It also brings in the bases the the basic the bases and the alkalis .
24 This is a very handy aspect of the program , since it brings in the prospect of it being used for other purposes .
25 That brings in the matter of recreational use — angling or , perhaps , boating .
26 The proliferation of one-day cricket — there were 227 limited-over internationals played between the last two World Cups — is a reflection of modern-day audience demand , and , overseas anyway , is what brings in the cash .
27 Faced with dwindling sales and stiffer competition , all luxury-goods firms need to turn to the boring disciplines that many have dismissed as suitable for widget-makers , but hardly appropriate for a trade where cachet brings in the cash .
28 The magazine text brings in the paradox of public and yet as if private utterance : ‘ His words were as if spoken to himself , but he spoke them aloud , and he continued for some time to look at his sister like a man perplexed . ’
29 She wants to ask him why he is here , but he moves away , brings over a loaf of bread , freshly baked , still warm in the centre .
30 This brings up a dialogue box , where you type in the necessary alterations .
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