Example sentences of "in [noun] [prep] [art] [noun sg] [noun pl] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 As a result banks may have to call in money from the discount houses , which , in turn being short of liquidity , have to sell bills back to the Bank of England ( acting as lender of last resort ) .
2 If commercial banks are short of liquid assets , they will have to call in money from the discount houses .
3 The banks might then be obliged to call in money from the discount houses .
4 Banks , now short of cash , call in money from the discount houses , which are in turn forced to borrow from the Bank of England .
5 Manolo had always known there were men in suits behind the Surf Nazis , but he 'd never carried the vendetta to them .
6 Whether the world 's nations can work together to minimize the adverse consequences of the future rise in global sea level , let alone achieve significant reductions in emissions of the greenhouse gases causing global warming and the associated rising seas , remains to be seen ( refer to chapter 12 ) .
7 But the town workers , they of course arc in harness with the factory masters and proprietors of industry , and they want cheap corn . ’
8 Here we are reminded of studies carried out some years ago in Germany on the personality characteristics of a large group of professional painters and sculptors .
9 But the Hammonds fell into arrears in payment of the mortgage instalments due to the building society .
10 At low frequencies the signals do not have much carrying capacity , but go too high and the oxygen and hydrogen molecules in the atmosphere can actually vibrate in sympathy with the radio waves , absorbing the signals .
11 The Court of Appeal in R & B Custom Brokers Co Ltd v United Dominions Trust Ltd [ 1988 ] 1 WLR 321 , applied the criteria identified in cases under the Trade Descriptions Act 1968 including Davies v Sumner ( 1988 ) in resolving this question ( see pp46-8 ) .
12 Only a few weeks before , he had said in response to a publicity interviewers ' assertion that his father , John , had abandoned the family when he was born : ‘ My father and mother separated when I was a baby .
13 As for the fuller versions of the migration , as preserved in Fredegar 's Chronicle and in the Liber Historiae Francorum , they may have been written in response to the origin legends of the Goths , which had been developed by Cassiodorus and preserved by Jordanes .
14 There were any number of flogging editorials in response to the Hooligan outrages — in The Daily Mail , for example , the News of the World and even the medical journal The Lancet — and the Ratepayers ' Association manifesto was widely reported in the press as evidence of public support for flogging .
15 Herd formation may then come about in response to the distribution patterns of rich food in patches .
16 In response to the austerity measures introduced after the OPEC ban , including a three-day working week , they struck against the Conservative government of Edward Heath in 1975 , eventually contributing to its defeat .
17 During the decade after the war , immigration , most particularly from the West Indies , rose sharply in response to the employment opportunities I mentioned earlier .
18 In response to the import quotas , Japanese manufacturers have been rapidly expanding production in the US .
19 Yet within Oxford her energies and charm were employed chiefly in defence of the home students , a growing society that included mature students and foreigners and prospered under her quietly autocratic but kindly regime .
20 COPPES has set up a mural newspaper , in defence of the prison authorities , which comments on the national Political situation .
21 Initially , about 150 young bloods expressed an interest and took part in rehearsals in the home counties but most of them withdrew when they realised the costs of hiring armour and equipment , of having gowns and costumes made for their ladies and attendants , and of transporting their retinues to Scotland .
22 In that time , we were tied to the gold standard , which we found to be inadequate and inflexible , especially as it depended in part on the mining activities in the gold mines of South Africa and the Soviet Union .
23 They are normative because the assessment will depend in part on the value judgements adopted by the assessor .
24 The London SCCs originated in part from the Relief Committees established in 1899 by the School Board , and continued by the LCC until they were renamed in 1907 when the Council put into effect section ( 1a ) of the Education ( Provision of Meals ) Act 1906 , which called for the establishment of Canteen Committees .
25 The costs of convalescence are normally met in part by individual or Branch contributions and in part by the welfare funds raised by the Association .
26 The costs of convalescence are normally met in part by individual or Branch contributions , and in part by the welfare funds raised by the Association .
27 The Salvadorean people are giving a lesson to the whole world , and especially to the North Americans , because even after almost three years of finding ourselves beset by the guerrilla , a total misgovernment by the PDC and a catastrophic foreign intervention , we still have the moral integrity " to continue protecting against such a calamity " , financed and encouraged in part by the leftist sectors which have infiltrated the North American government …
28 The report pointed out that in Germany the role of channelling knowledge and technology from HE to industry is fulfilled in part by the Fraunhofer institutes , bridging the divide between the aspirations of academia and industry .
29 Life was not quite a state of nature or a question of the survival of the fittest , but in times of no food parcels the partition separating us from that state was unpleasantly thin and even at the best of times it was thin enough to be able to hear most of what went on on the other side .
30 More recently , in his The Sons of Horus he has found ways of incorporating the profiled attitudes and poses seen in ancient Egyptian designs with straight turned-in legs , elongated lines and angled arms , all in contrast to the turnedout legs and curving bodies of classical dance .
  Next page