Example sentences of "and in [adj] [noun pl] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Psycholinguists and AI researchers have both contributed toward theories of word meaning , and in recent decades a number of distinct theories have evolved . |
2 | Elves live long lives but their children are few and in recent centuries the birthrate has declined steeply . |
3 | The acoustics are particularly good , and in recent years the cathedral has played host to International Bach Concerts in June . |
4 | The charge made for school meals is a good example , and in recent years the burden has grown as the price of a school meal has increased dramatically . |
5 | The consultation partner should be involved in the engagement at the outset and in appropriate circumstances the basis of valuation discussed and agreed in advance . |
6 | Indeed , some forms of regulatory rule-breaking are dealt with by a penal style of enforcement at the outset , and in other circumstances a compliance strategy will subsequently yield to a sanctioning approach if the struggle for conformity is lost . |
7 | Sometimes girls are there because they are very young or they are homeless , sometimes it is because their parents can not cope at home with the responsibility for them and a newborn baby , and in other cases a home takes in and assesses girls whose ability to look after their baby is in question . |
8 | This data is for a trained writer ( ie. the Freeman vector database contains details of the writer 's handwriting ) , and as can be seen , the number of candidate words can be high , and in such cases the spread of lengths of the candidates is quite wide . |
9 | A joint venture between competitors or potential competitors may infringe Article 85 of the Treaty of Rome if the participants could reasonably have been expected to enter the market individually , and in such cases the creation of an EEIG will not obviate the need to seek an exemption , or at least a comfort letter , from the Commission . |
10 | The demised property may be part only of the premises on which the tenant carries on business and in such cases the turnover may need to be apportioned . |
11 | Held , dismissing the appeals , ( 1 ) that , on its true construction , section 6(3) ( a ) of the Act of 1980 had to be given a literal meaning ; that where a school was over-subscribed compliance with the preference of all the applicants would necessarily prejudice efficient education , and in such circumstances the school had to have an admissions policy , which would inevitably result in defeating the preference of some applicants , whatever criteria were adopted ; and that , accordingly , since the school was over-subscribed , there was no duty on the governors to give effect to the applicants ' preferences ( post , pp. 100H — 101B , 106H , 107G–H , 108A , G–H ) . |
12 | The difference in Conway was that the suspect had asked for a parade , and in such circumstances the Code of Practice on Identification states ( in para. 2.1 of the original Code ; 2.3 of the revised version ) that a parade is mandatory unless it is impracticable to hold one ( Brown [ 1991 ] Crim.L.R. 368 ) . |
13 | The rabbits are , of course , moving targets and in such circumstances the shotgun is effective whereas the rifle would fail . |
14 | It is important to note that the Act does not require all landowners to fence against the highway : in moorland areas of Wales and the north of England this would be an intolerable burden and in such areas a motorist must be expected to be on the look out for straying livestock . |
15 | Village foundation was to be yet another example of developing the total resources of the estate , and in such enterprises the landowner was supposed to display concern for his former tenants newly displaced . |
16 | LTF , however , lasts much longer than a mere ten hours ; the effect can also be found in unanaesthetized animals implanted with permanent electrodes , and in such animals the potentiation has been observed as much as 16 weeks after the initial brief burst of stimulation . |
17 | But in a majority of cases there has been some success , and in many instances the outcome has been very successful . |
18 | On the other hand , policymaking is relatively less complex at the local level , and in many authorities a committee chairman may have acquired considerable specialist knowledge by holding the chairmanship — or serving on the committee concerned-for many years . |
19 | No they 're not the realities , because what we 're saying is that we have to modernize the policies of the Labour Party , but the policies are absolutely based in our traditional concerns , I mean , let me give you an example , when Beveridge was talking about unemployment , and the life long need for people to work , he was talking about a male workforce , where it was a man supported by a non-working wife , now we still have at the absolute heart of our concerns in the Labour Party peoples need to work , but we 're now talking about a situation , where women are sharing with their husbands the role of bed breadwinner , and in many families the woman is the sole breadwinner , and therefore our policies about employment and the economy recognize that the world has changed , our principles are the same , but the world to which we 're applying it is very different , and , again , on that you see there would be no distinction between the so-called traditionalists and the so-called modernizers . |
20 | Addressee honorifics ( including dishonorifics and intimacy markers ) , for example , turn up in lexical alternates or suppletive forms ( in e.g. Javanese ; Geertz , 1960 ) , in morphology ( in e.g. Japanese ; Harada , 1976 ) , in particles or affixes ( in e.g. Tamil ; Levinson , 1979b ) , in segmental phonology ( in e.g. Basque ; Corum , 1975 : 96 ) , in prosodics ( in e.g. Tzeltal honorific falsetto ; Brown & Levinson , 1978 : 272 ) , and in many cases a mixture of these ( in e.g. Javanese , Japanese , Madurese , Korean ) . |
21 | Interest is not usually paid on such deposit balances and in many cases a service charge is made on each withdrawal . |
22 | However poor , a child who passed the hurdle of the special place examination would get an education which would open up university or further training and , if not that , a white-collar , clean , respectable job — and in many cases an allowance to help with his or her maintenance . |
23 | Superficially , the approach is the same whether the remedy is contained in conditions of sale or conditions of purchase , and in many cases the wording of the remedies may be very similar indeed . |
24 | He claimed that complaints were up but nobody ever thought of complaining when the Labour party was in power because there was not a proper procedure , and in many cases the service was so bad that people did not bother . |
25 | It will need positive leadership and in many cases the provision of a skilled person to initiate and guide the home group evangelistic programme . |
26 | ‘ Counterfeiting techniques have become highly sophisticated and in many cases the packaging has been copied to the finest degree so that the ordinary consumer would have absolutely no idea , from the outside , that they were n't buying the genuine article , ’ explains Mike Wadsley . |
27 | Forestry practices in the developing world are diverse and complex and in many cases the absence of overall institutional control of forests coupled with other pressures , such as expanding agriculture , has resulted in indiscriminate exploitation . |
28 | For example , non-Christian religions were developed in more detail , and in many places a user was able to treat his own country or religion as the preferred category . |
29 | Manorial courts continued to meet regularly throughout the early-modern period and in many places the quality of record-keeping remained high right through to the eighteenth century and sometimes beyond . |
30 | At the same time , one introduces the idea of thermal energy , heat , and in many situations the requirement is in fact is to start from energy in one form , such as heat from burning oil , to satisfy a requirement for energy in another form , in other words mechanical energy — the turning of a shaft — so somewhere there has to be a device which converts the heat energy into mechanical energy . |