Example sentences of "be [adj] [conj] [adv] [adv] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | There are suggestions that the differences within the group labelled Asian are large but here again no details are provided . |
2 | Afterwards I will have to knock on other doors but I am sure that yet again the right door will open at the right time . |
3 | However , some risks may simply be unacceptable and therefore not a matter for compromise or optimisation . |
4 | Such projects were popular constructions in the late 1970s and early 1980s , and I am worried that once again the Welsh Office is trying to catch up with a fashion or a phase that has passed . |
5 | He felt it was his duty to protect the girl if her claims against her father were right and just not a 1 5-year-old girl 's fantasies ’ . |
6 | They both were astonished that so far no indication of trouble had come from the town common ; but reckoned that it would not be long now before it did , for a few escapers from the castle had been glimpsed running in that direction . |
7 | It is doubtful whether ever again the one-man universal classification schemes will make any sense ; it is too big a task . |
8 | * Organising an essay around a pre-existing sequence ( such as historical order ) is straightforward but often not the most interesting or useful option ( see p. 54 ) . |
9 | It 's unfortunate that yet again the Mercury got it wrong they stated that we had made a decision to close four homes |
10 | Where this is slight or uniformly even no problems arise . |
11 | But this is localized and too often the motivation for assistance is one-sided and temporary . |
12 | If we now turn our attention to the hero-literature of ancient Greece , it is notable that just about every prominent hero does battle at one time or another , and sometimes repeatedly , with Amazon women . |
13 | The well was dry and shortly thereafter the Marathon licences in Northern Ireland were relinquished . |
14 | Likewise , example ( 24 ) suggests that the event was unforeseen and therefore all the more outrageous : ( 24 ) To lose his bargain through the obstinacy of a fool , to have his patronage overlooked by a subordinate , choked him with rage . |