Example sentences of "a [adj] and [adv] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 That all this was long gone and impossible to recover , except through industrialisation , social change and arduous struggle with a resilient and increasingly nationalist foe only made life in the eastern borders even more frustrating .
2 Her long face , with thick eyebrows , is that of a pleasant and ever-so-slightly bored horse , but she also has long legs , and no bottom to speak of , and wears her hair long , straight and black to her shoulders .
3 We may employ slang terms or colloquialisms — and English has a rich and constantly changing vocabulary of such words and phrases .
4 In the first condition individuals that breed soonest produce young at the peak of a rich and often superabundant period of food production .
5 Neither William nor Charles Frederick had quite the severity of countenance which one associates with Benjamin James : William in his twenties had a pleasant and confident face , with a full mouth which he would allow to be overgrown by a drooping and slightly unkempt moustache in later years .
6 The door can converse intelligently , and has a haughty and slightly sarcastic tone of voice .
7 She had only met them once and they had seemed a friendly and most devoted couple .
8 This is done by , among other things , the sharing of stories , exchange of gossip , and a friendly and very sharp banter ( at which policemen are very good ) , during which sergeants sometimes have to struggle to rise above the one-line wit and are often themselves forced to succumb ( on the use of rituals at the beginning of work in American police departments see Niederhoffer 1967 ) .
9 ‘ We have concluded that future growth opportunities can best be exploited by a simpler and more efficient organisation than exists today and we will be making a significant capital investment to increase production efficiency at our Kirkliston site as well as increasing our marketing effort worldwide . ’
10 But conventionalism can not be justified on the sole ground that surprise is inefficient or undesirable in these ways , because conventionalism does not protect against surprise as well as a simpler and more straightforward theory of adjudication would .
11 A simpler and more pleasant way of achieving the same end was to use jade vessels for food and drink .
12 As this inhibition was less than the accompanying inhibition of PGE 2 it was possible to argue that some substrate diversion might have occurred , although weak inhibition of the 5-lipoxygenase enzyme by indomethacin seems a simpler and more plausible explanation .
13 I found Basil a shy and rather quiet man who had a deep sense of fun under his quiet exterior .
14 And just as late Palaeolithic and early Neolithic cultures demonstrated their difficulty in detaching themselves from the primal mother of the previous epoch , so modern youth expresses its inability to surmount the oral attachment by coupling its parricidal protest against authority with a simultaneous and equally insistent demand for welfare .
15 On the one hand , there has been a redefinition and tightening of formal controls , but on the other , there has been a simultaneous and sometimes incompatible thrust towards more management autonomy .
16 In March 1990 Iain Vallance , its chairman , announced a reorganisation programme called Project Sovereign , aimed at achieving ‘ a leaner and more supple organisation , structured to meet the differing needs of all our customers .
17 To many this might seem a dry and rather dusty concern ; but those who have watched the progress of AD can hardly fail to ask if the person they once knew is still somehow trapped within the body and mind of the sufferer .
18 Here , as a subtle and admirably thorough critique of his achievement by a philosopher , Steven Lukes , points out , Durkheim anticipated Wittgenstein by at least half a century in showing how concepts were ( socially generated ) collective representations .
19 The other meaning uses plastered in the type of structure which we have introduced in the present section ; notice that it allows addition of to be ( and that it is parallel in its overall structure to ( 42 ) where there is a non-finite clause complete with subject , verb and object ) : ( 41 ) Clara wants the façade to be plastered ( 42 ) she wants the builders to plaster the façade Let us also take note of a subtle and rather interesting ambiguity , found in : ( 43 ) Oliver imagined her red-haired This may mean that Oliver is allowing himself to speculate on the effect of , let us say , adding a wig to a blonde lady of his acquaintance ( and this may therefore be called the " cosmetic " version ) ; or he may be trying to build a mental picture of someone he has never met ( the " unacquainted " version ) , in which case imagined could be replaced by supposed with very little alteration in the meaning of the whole .
20 It also suggests why ‘ interdisciplinarity ’ may occur not simply at the notional boundaries of contiguous disciplines , but as a subtle and often unpredictable flow of information and influence from one part of the model to another .
21 MY husband and I arrived home in Dumfriesshire , after a memorable and highly emotional weekend in dear old Liverpool .
22 The victim was drugged , he suggests , because ‘ nobody involved had the courage to shoot a helpless and fully conscious man at pointblank range .
23 The high unemployment of the 1970s and 1980s seems unlikely to be a temporary phenomenon : in fact many experts predict a persistent and probably increasing level of unemployment in Western economies for the rest of the century .
24 Whatever the causes of construction delays , they were to remain a persistent and seemingly insoluble problem , not only for the electricity supply industry but for a wide range of other British industries embarking on such large capital projects for decades thereafter .
25 He said Hong Kong could face a ‘ period of political siege for the next four years followed by an abrupt transition to a harsher and more repressive regime . ’
26 The most common complication is a prolonged and often uncomfortable pain which can last for weeks or even months .
27 But one criticism made later in the same commentary drew attention to what was thought to be missing " above all , two things : one of them a sense of history , both a broad and more local framework within which the achievement of these schools can be placed and evaluated ; the other a sense of the actual texture of the schools themselves " ( Tizard et al.
28 A broad and often uneasy coalition — of medics , clerics , social purists , eugenists and some feminists — campaigned to raise the question as a matter of vital national and even imperial concern .
29 All radical movements , as Bittner ( 1963 ) notes , seek a unified and internally consistent interpretation of the meaning of the world .
30 The Countess fell into a disapproving silence as a young and handsome British officer offered Lucille a low and evidently uncorseted bow .
  Next page