Example sentences of "in [noun] [coord] [adv] in [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | If case management is expected to improve the client 's QOL , then the client 's subjective assessment of his or her well-being is a crucial component in assessment and also in outcome measurement . |
2 | The exploration of what each part of the body can express in isolation and then in co-ordination with the rest is possibly the most important aspect of a choreographer 's work if it seeks to be modern in spirit and technique . |
3 | Only when they have examined what hands , arms , legs and feet , body and above all the head can do in isolation and then in harmony with the story , theme or music , can they set out and create a style which will be general in structure and particular in texture , with the right quality , mood , emotion , action and character . |
4 | To the extent that these may appear antithetical to modernism , not only in practice but also in theory , then we may find ourselves running up against the limits of our modernist frameworks of understanding . |
5 | Through such processes , it was felt , the basis of public law was no longer to be rooted in command but rather in organization . |
6 | My soul did hang as in a pair of scales , sometimes up and sometimes down , now in peace and anon in terror . ’ |
7 | Some twenty-five years later , when I became interested in hypnosis and then in regression therapy , I began to wonder whether my earlier fascination was because I had actually lived in Tudor times . |
8 | Neon Tetras — A small Characin with very bright blue and red colouration which must only be kept in shoals and preferably in acid water . |
9 | Along the southern side of the island an ophiolitic suite with basalts unusually low in barium but high in titanium , zirconium and phosphorus is separated from the main part of the island by a major suture marked by serpentinite pods and lenses . |
10 | Regular sea-watches have recorded small passage movements in autumn , mainly in November and again in spring , usually in March . |
11 | Early this century jute sacks became widely used for home distribution although the export of cement still continued in battels and later in steel drums . |
12 | He commences upon the dismantling of assumptions of where the texts are funny or obscene based on modern suppositions of what constitutes obscenity et al. , and puts forward a theory that picks up a suggestion of Nykrog 's concerning the relationship of fabliau and romance : that the fabliaux flourished as a conservative reaction to new notions of gentility and decency in behaviour and especially in language ; new notions that are found most clearly in the literary cult of fin amour . |
13 | They were to be allowed to use some of the gentry 's farmland , but not necessarily in perpetuity and only in return for labour services or cash . |
14 | Then there was Payne Stewart in waterproofs and also in water , playing splash shots like a rabbit . |
15 | Of Baking , Marie Ure says : ‘ Once again I am lost in admiration at the magnificent response to the appeal , in quantity , in quality and also in imagination . |
16 | Now he was talking in the context of er of of a , er but it is something that I think the government does need to look at because given the nature of multi-national companies or even the nature of public companies and private companies in this country where there is a public interest , not just in efficiency but also in probity . |
17 | Finally , if different underlying forms of firm differ in efficiency and so in cost , this is obviously of some importance . |
18 | 1974 was the time of a change in direction not only in career but also in fossil hunting . |
19 | When , for example , Alexander Gordon of Strathdon came to Elgin on 5 November 1539 to bind himself in manrent to George earl of Huntly , promising to serve him in peace and war , give him counsel , and protect him against harm , he was only one of many hundreds of men throughout the country during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries making such an obligation , and thereby creating strong personal relationships based always in theory and normally in reality not just on mutual self-interest but on mutual loyalty and trust . |
20 | But Standard English serves particular functions : for example , in the education system and in professional life , in public and formal uses , in writing and particularly in print . |
21 | His influence throughout this period was extensive , not only in Britain but also in North America . |
22 | Thus , we can see strikes still frequent , but becoming larger in size and longer in duration . |
23 | The man smiled as if intrigued by Corbett , muttering a few words first in Portuguese and then in English . |
24 | By one means , therefore , or by other , either by hook or crook , they must needs depart away , poor , silly , wretched souls , men , women , husbands , wives , fatherless children , widows , woeful mothers with their young babes , and their whole household small in substance and much in number , as husbandry requireth many hands . |
25 | The artists had unlimited patience not only in modelling but also in casting , for some pieces were made in stages . |
26 | Most of the men there had families or commitments in England , and while they would support the Irish cause in word and sometimes in deed , no-one ever seriously considered leaving everything to go and fight for the cause . |
27 | The daily rising and setting of the sun brings changes not only in temperatures but also in humidity and light . |
28 | He was educated at Westminster School , where he specialized in classics and then in science , which he continued at King 's College , Cambridge . |
29 | The rest of Europe has watched in fascination and sometimes in fear . |
30 | When an architecture is implemented partly in hardware and partly in software we require such concepts as extracodes and microprogramming , and these are discussed in Chapter 3 . |