Example sentences of "in the [adj] [noun sg] [pers pn] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 In the Labour movement it never made much impact , for it always remained an alien force , financed and directed from outside , but it achieved something in taking the battle on to the streets in order to break up the meetings of the left .
2 In the final analysis it really is up to the planning officers and the planning committee to decide whether the benefits which it will bring to the locality outweigh the objectors ' views .
3 These families may be described as a traditional élite ; in the twentieth century they either found new sources of wealth and influence or became local notables .
4 It turns out ( though we are not going to prove it here ) that the exact shape of the current loop is immaterial ( not unreasonable if the loop is far away ) and in the general case we only need to replace unc by S , the area of the loop .
5 ‘ To my infinite regret , ’ she wrote , in the flowery style she now affected , ‘ I have been quite unable to visit my childhood home .
6 In the latter year he also published the massive and learned Northamptonshire Families for the Victoria County History ( 2 vols . ) .
7 But in the latter year he also published Neue teutsche [ sic ] Gesang nach Art der welschen Madrigalien und Canzonetten in which the weight of German words naturally affects the music ; when he sets translations of Italian texts he has also composed , the difference is startling :
8 Activists also like being thrown in the deep end they quite like the challenge of being thrown in and sink or swim and learn from the experience , rather than actually talking about too much and then a little bit of action later .
9 Where , in the Report , Beveridge talked of the ‘ strong public opinion ’ in favour of subsistence pensions , in the private memorandum he contemptuously dismissed this as ‘ sentimental and political ’ , insisting that the state should retain the right to reduce pensions below subsistence on grounds of financial stringency or a fall in the cost of living , and warning of the dangers of a ‘ birthday present ’ mentality if there was no retirement condition .
10 Eight-year-olds were beginning to acknowledge the distinction , in that when they used the causal connectives in the deductive mode they appropriately followed because with evidence and so with a conclusion .
11 In The Towering Inferno you always felt you were standing outside the fire , in Backdraft you 're right in the middle of it . ’
12 Although many people do not like talk of market forces , the plain fact is that in the real world we simply can not ignore them .
13 The long-range effects of mutations in the variable loop we then found for the synthesis of m 2 2G26 prompted us to investigate if also the formation of modifications in the anticodon loop were sensitive to point mutations situated far away in the tRNA .
14 This may have been the case when Lady C. first frightened the servants back in the twenties , but now that kind of behaviour would probably land Mellors in the hot water he so obviously needs .
15 ( In the 1992 election it hardly got beyond a slanging match over who had identified the young patient awaiting treatment for glue ear who was featured in a Labour election broadcast . )
16 In the Far East it already has two partners in the shape of Kokusai Denshin Denwa Co Ltd and presently state-owned Singapore Telecom , and the trio say they will spend over $100m over the next few years on WorldPartners .
17 In the new year we also expect to launch a forum which will promote information exchange between users and potential users of expert systems .
18 In the first half he twice denied Cantona with excellent saves and shortly into the second he beat out another effort by the Frenchman .
19 As early as 14 September 1939 , Jonas Barrington in the Daily Express described this voice that called from Germany , though in the first instance it probably belonged to Norman Baillie-Stewart : ‘ He speaks English of the haw-haw , dammit-get-out-of-my-way-variety , and his strong suit is gentlemanly indignation . ’
20 In the first set he simply was n't in the same class as his 21-year-old opponent in the huge Olympic Hall , at times pleading theatrically with Ferreira not to hit so hard , and giving his racket to a ball-boy as if to say , ‘ you have a go , you ca n't be worse than me . ’
21 If reserves play in the first team they still charge first team prices .
22 in the first place I just find it
23 We 've got one corner of the garden out the front and if the wind 's in the right direction it neatly puts them all together .
24 In the long run we still want something that will enable us to stop the resistance completely , ’ she said .
25 But in the long run it only makes me feel worse about myself .
26 While this may have appeared to solve the monarchy 's immediate problems , in the long run it only made them worse .
27 And although there is usually another promise about interest rates , in the long run it usually means very little .
28 In the first place , he 's wealthy and in the second place I never could get on with his father .
29 In the second paragraph they expressly referred to the right of an over-subscribed school to adopt reasonable criteria for selection , the criteria had been published in this case , and that they were required to take such criteria into account .
30 In the present study we also analysed the relation between active H pylori infection and serum pepsinogen-I and pepsinogen-II concentrations .
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