Example sentences of "always [verb] [prep] [art] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Relative coverage of Labour and Conservative was always biased towards the Conservative government but the degree of bias increased sharply ( it tripled ) in the fourth week of the campaign .
2 Where there are dramatic differences of incidence for different groups , where the social pattern investigated is simplex ( for example , class difference only ) , and where the differences virtually always tend in the same direction , it is often unnecessary to test for significance , because the patterns revealed are so clear that no one could believe they are the results of pure chance .
3 It was part of my planning to use this day to catch up with the vast mound of paperwork , documentation of seizures and reports , which always accumulates after a successful revenue operation .
4 Absences from work due to leave , sickness , court attendance , police business elsewhere , or transfers can seriously deplete this number on occasions , leaving the section very understaffed , which is why managers are so sensitive about constables phoning in sick , although this sensitivity is not always communicated in a heavy-handed manner .
5 Even in this type of community , however , men did not always stay at the same job all their lives .
6 Typically they are geographically mobile , living relatively far away from kin , work and friends ; they separate work from leisure and do not always socialise with the same group of people who all know each other .
7 But it did n't always make for an easy life .
8 In quantum theory probabilities are always calculated in a two-step fashion .
9 According to Locke , however , the question is ‘ what makes the same person , and not whether it be the same identical substance , which always thinks in the same person , which in this case matters not at all ’ .
10 I am always fascinated by the little test I frequently do with my girls , I go through MKM and Modern Knitting and ask them to give marks , out of ten , for all the garments .
11 The moral is obvious : always communicate in the other person 's language .
12 It always made for a grand fightfinisher .
13 Clough has always marched to a different tune , but this time his perversity may finally be his undoing .
14 It seems that in any country , the Rottweiler is always recognized as a working dog first and a show dog as an after thought and then as only a show dog .
15 Well I suppose it because , as I told you , those four routes were always treated as a separate entity because they were on , there were possible chances of marrying those routes together to get them to run the most economical way .
16 ‘ She can always think of a good plan .
17 By the 1880s the Longhorn was almost extinct but always regarded with a certain fondness as a quaint and essentially useful animal which appealed to cattle-lovers in spite of its commercial faults .
18 Yet despite this decision — always regarded as a classic illustration of the common-law presumption in favour of freedom of assembly — the law has developed to the point where we can say with reasonable assurance that the residue of which Dicey was so proud has narrowed to the point of extinction .
19 However , whereas routine can become mechanical , ritual itself is always intended as a conscious act .
20 India were always struggling after a tight opening blast by Allan Donald and Fanie de Villiers and were bowled out for 177 .
21 In acquiring one 's conception of the world one always belongs to a particular grouping which is that of all the social elements which share the same mode of thinking and acting … .
22 ( Though I do have a friend — Bunny — who always insists on a female doctor or nurse if he has anything wrong of a private nature .
23 The serjeants at law , who had the exclusive privilege of practising , pleading and audience in the Court of Common Pleas from time immemorial until their exclusive privileges were abolished by the Practitioners in Common Pleas Act 1846 ( 9 & 10 Vict. c. 54 ) , had always fallen into a special category and before the events of 1292 to which reference is made in the 1970 judgment , Parliament had introduced an elementary form of disciplinary control over serjeants and pleaders in the Statute of Westminster 1275 ( 3 Edw. 1 c. 29 ) which provided , in the event of attainder for deceit or collusion in the King 's Court , for a term of imprisonment and for disqualification for life from ‘ pleading in that court for any man . ’
24 And I , I 'm going to be working from behind Denise because you all need to see , but you would be working from the front as I 've already talked about , so you need your triangular bandage , alright , and there 's your long edge , and there 's your point as we call it , a sort of elbow shaped , think of that as elbow shaped because it always goes towards the injured elbow .
25 It always goes onto the next number .
26 You can place a marker at the edge of the swim which , at forty yards or more range , is a tremendous aid to accurate casting and ensures that groundbait always goes in the same spot .
27 Our policy is always to debate with the middle ground , extending the metaphorical hand to people who may not agree .
28 Her prose has always relied on a certain musicality and lyricism to seduce and keep us spellbound .
29 Erm we , we have of course , we 've got a , we have a congress each year , which erm we , each Guild is allowed to send one delegate and so really , we always stress at the top level that erm you know , it 's you that run the Guild you ca n't blame head office , the Nat National Executive , because you 're the ones who send the people to the top , are n't you ?
30 He is assiduous in plying me with melba toast , and has the charm one always associates with a private homosexual .
  Next page