Example sentences of "[prep] fully " in BNC.

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1 This would be covered 2.6 times by earnings ( excluding additional tax ) or 2.3 times after fully allowing for additional Advance Corporation Tax ( ‘ ACT ’ ) .
2 The cost of fully immunising each child is around £6 .
3 It has a couple of fully formed battalions , the rest organised in indiviudal companies , two of which are devoted to maintaining public order .
4 Ferdinand , desperate to be accepted by the cognoscenti and to build up political influence , flaunted his lavishness by building a gigantic French château of bright yellow Bath stone With 222 rooms , and by planting hundreds of fully grown trees on the high bare hill on which it stood .
5 The Free Presbyterians can be divided into a very small group of what one man called ‘ the bible college — God bless you brother — every blessing ’ types who remained distant from politics ; the majority who saw themselves as being unionist , but not especially so , who were forced into political activity by the alliance of O'Neillism and the ecumenical movement ; and a small circle of fully politicized ministers .
6 If every other advanced democratic country can cope with the challenge of fully democratically elected parliaments , it is hard to see why it should present insuperable problems in Britain .
7 It is the genius of Shakespeare that his plays offer plenty of fully written parts to a band of players .
8 We will enable the establishment of fully democratic regional governments throughout England .
9 Charlie was a bustling , enthusiastic bundle of driving energy who played at inside-right for the Palace throughout the five seasons up to the end of fully competitive football in 1915 .
10 Jack Little was Palace 's first choice right-back for some seven seasons , on the resumption of fully competitive football after the end of the 1st World War , but he was well-known to followers of the sport in the wider Croydon area for considerably longer , because he had been a regular member of the Croydon Common side , which won promotion from the 2nd Division of the Southern League in 1913–14 with a remarkable defensive record of only conceding 14 goals in 30 matches .
11 The importance of fully involving the patient 's partner in assessment and subsequent treatment is very clear .
12 Evening courses were arranged on all sorts of subjects , which we as shift workers were unfortunately not able to take advantage of fully , as we had to work during the evenings .
13 In the same year , Lyman Spitzer 's slim volume Physics of fully Ionised Gases gave a canonical account of the theoretical basis of high-temperature plasma physics and the first real text-book on the subject .
14 According to a game survey recently performed by a group at the Istituto di Zoologia of the University of Rome , Italy 's population of fully wild , feral dogs has exploded to above 80 000 and is fuelled by a pool of perhaps ten times as many stray and free-ranging animals .
15 Already in Carolingian times the imperial army had had a nucleus of fully trained warriors who served their lord in exchange for holding substantial fiefs .
16 The final show in the Inspirals ' foray into Finland takes place under clouded skies , on an enormo stage , in front of a field of fully of happily drunk hippy kids who , when they walk on stage , appear to be principally interested in fighting each other , or lying on their backs staring at the clouds .
17 A major reason for this is that the high productivity of fully automated plants satisfies the basic consumption needs of workers but , instead of this leading to a high level of satisfaction , workers freed from the immediate concern of making ends meet are then able to pose what Mallet takes to be the more fundamental problem of their alienation from their work .
18 The job security which Mallet , as we have already indicated , assumes will follow the introduction of fully automated plant gives workers the opportunity to develop a substantial knowledge about the firm and its activities .
19 Keeping up permanent co-ordination between personality and outer appearance is as oppressive as never daring to appear in public without a set of fully matching clothes and accessories .
20 Available in two styles — the Emerald and the Sapphire — all panels come in a choice of fully glazed , top glazed , and solid forms .
21 But Hankamer 's idea is more appropriate to the ‘ evolution ’ of fully fledged languages , a process of interest in its own right but somewhat peripheral to the project of accounting for how more complex linguistic structures might have evolved from simpler ones .
22 But the reason why Fox reports that ‘ there is virtually unanimous agreement among working scientists that animals will never be replaced entirely in the laboratory ’ ( 1986 : 174 ) , except perhaps in the fields of product and drug research and development , is that numerous research projects involve the study of fully functioning live animals ( in vivo ) .
23 The lack of fully operational IPPs , which could have provided a safeguard against inconsistency , adds to workers ' anxiety that Elizabeth and Helen are being let down .
24 This increase came in the form of an increase in the number of fully funded numbers .
25 The aim of this study was to find out who is really afraid of fully informed consent : British patients or their doctors ?
26 " By this means we hope to place at the disposal of our party in Parliament and in the country a trained body of fully formed critics , able not only to expose and correct the usual crudities of Radical-Socialist legislation , but to give form to a comprehensive policy of social reform . "
27 However , " for more than a generation " university schools of English have been dominated by " historical critics " attempting the " impossible " task of fully recovering " the meaning imputed to a poem by the author and his contemporaries " .
28 He began to remark to others that he could not make the necessary synthesis , perhaps referring to a marriage of his romantic inclinations with the aim , inculcated in him by Colquhoun and MacBryde , to make it ‘ tight ’ , to achieve the kind of fully integrated compositional resolution often associated with classical art .
29 The number of fully established senses is presumably finite at any one time ( though it may differ for different members of the language community , and at different times for the same speaker ) .
30 In these later stages , the earlier stress on accommodation and the later stress on assimilation come into equilibrium , attaining the reciprocity and balance of fully operational thought .
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