Example sentences of "the [noun] [vb -s] [adv] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 The response depends critically on the particular experimental method used to provoke it .
2 Thus , the terminology corresponds approximately with the nature of the landform , although there are low raised beaches without deposits and a few of the higher marine terraces with deposits .
3 The remainder comes mostly from the countries around the Mediterranean , but what the original almond growers lack in quantity they apparently make up for in quality .
4 But under the 1965 Act once the plaintiff is found to be intentional or reckless within the meaning of the subsection , the amount of the reduction rests solely on the extent to which the harm is caused by the plaintiff 's act .
5 And the prince goes down through the wood to another exit
6 The base goes back to the RAFin SEptember 94. it 's not yet known what will be done with the land but many local people hope it 'll be used the upper H
7 The provision arises principally from the different accounting and tax treatments for amortising field assets .
8 It 's a long walk to Meall Corranaich and just before the top , the ridge splits away to the west which causes some confusion in poor visibility .
9 Either way , the change sits there for the reader , fascinating , not to be ignored .
10 GM schools will be able to change their character if that is what parents clearly want and the change fits in with the wider needs of the local area .
11 The reason for the change points again to the essential dilemma trade unionism faced .
12 The trial continues today with the opening statement from the prosecution .
13 One is led to conclude from all this that despite some tactical ‘ victories ’ here and there , the British point of view with respect to policy in the EEC has not on the whole prevailed , any more than has its influence over the development of the institutional framework of the Community .
14 The board spins around on the tail with some assistance from the rig .
15 This position is reached when the board faces directly across the wind , the sail making the a right angle with the board .
16 In comparison with literature , as Christine Gledhill has observed , the appeal of the cinema lies exactly in the offer of an escape from language into ‘ the pleasure of an achieved unity between subject and reality ’ .
17 The muscles bounce ; thus the runner gains back from the environment most of the energy he needs for his rebound .
18 In custodial terms , even a successful simulation exercise does no more than transfer the operational persona of an historic early machine to a currently supportable platform ( typically a 486-based PC ) which will itself be duly subject to generational obsolescence : the potential of the technique lies not in the immortality of current hardware but in the prospect of machine-independent software .
19 Outside , the cottage industries have taken a rest as the heat of the afternoon settles heavily on the town like an unwelcome blanket .
20 Cross the pastry strips alternately over the filling to form a plait .
21 It 's odder still when the money comes not from the anonymous depths of the Eurocurrency market , but from the savings accounts of Americans living in Ohio .
22 Well as I say I mean we 're doing very well and all the money and , and you know , ninety percent of the money comes out of the the er the members ' pockets really I mean ev even the sub for the open show , we put out a lot of that even the stuff and things like this , so we do provide an awful lot of money .
23 Godard has revealingly said that cinema is dependent on capitalism in two senses : first in the making of the film and second that ‘ in film the money comes back in the image ’ ( MacCabe 1980 , p. 27 ) .
24 You 've got ta get the stu the smell goes in to the liquid then you chuck the liquid away .
25 The reason for this lies in the fact that the physics depends neither on the states alone nor on the observables alone but upon their interrelation .
26 The case arises out of the death of fourteen year old activist , Stompie Moeketsi .
27 And the damage spreads far beyond the borders of Scotland .
28 ( vi ) Style is relatively transparent or opaque : transparency implies paraphrasability ; opacity implies that a text can not be adequately paraphrased , and that interpretation of the text depends greatly on the creative imagination of the reader .
29 The text sets out from the premiss that the beneficiary of the trust ought to obtain the actual land ( rather than its value ) ; the question therefore is who ought to pay off the creditor to whom the land is presently pledged .
30 The text deals explicitly with the important cases and statutes as they arise within the framework of the book .
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