Example sentences of "[verb] [adv] [adv] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | And I 've nothing adverse to report on either the buses or the trains . |
2 | And I 've nothing to report on either the trains or the buses . |
3 | Fords and bridge sites often change little over the years and Watkins cites several examples of leys crossing rivers at fords . |
4 | I can escape other troubles and concentrate on just the one problem — how to make that damn ball go where I want . |
5 | The 90-page report by district auditor Paul Claydon concluded : ‘ There has been a succession of failings touching on almost every directorate within the council . |
6 | Serum concentrations of both are raised in patients with type II diabetes , reflecting most probably a shift in the relation between demand for insulin and the capacity to produce it . |
7 | Urban Development Corporations , the centrepiece of Mrs Thatcher 's urban policy , articulate most dramatically the current British government 's vision of city regeneration . |
8 | Firstly , the book is limited to those media which most absorbed people 's attention in the post-war era , and which met most fully the criteria of a mass medium — television , radio and newspapers . |
9 | But everywhere else — equally in the madrigal , chanson , and German polyphonic Lied , in the music of the Roman Church , Lutheran hymn , and Calvinist psalm note-against-note writing , in chords rather than contrapuntal lines , met most fully the demand for verbal clarity . |
10 | They have n't revealed their presence because our solar system is being treated rather like a nature reserve — that they do n't want to interpose themselves and spoil a very classic example of study of a lesser civilization growing up . |
11 | You mean rather then the , the report ? |
12 | He uses language and imagery which communicate most precisely the truths he wishes to convey to a specific audience . |
13 | Lloyd George and Kitchener have their biographies ; yet those who experienced most directly the turmoil , disruption and loss of the war have their information locked within their memory . |
14 | Explaining one of the sections of their manifesto in the preface to the exhibition at Bernheim 's , the Futurists , now aware of Cubist painting , talked for the first time of ‘ battles of planes ’ ; and Boccioni summarizes most concisely the debt of Futurism to Cubism when in Pittura Scultura Futuriste , published in 1914 , he wrote under the heading ‘ Compenetrazione dei Piani ’ : ‘ It is the pictorial method of rendering movement in a painting , making the surrounding objects fuse with the structure of the object placed in their midst ’ . |
15 | ( Where sounds correspond aurally yet the concept differs depending on the context , further confusion can arise . |
16 | We were most often directed to library skills and study skills lessons in which children were being taught rather unimaginatively a range of things from the Dewey Decimal Classification to the use of the full stop ! |
17 | I agree with what [ the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Scotland president ] said in a recent issue of CA about the importance of non-financial performance measurement , and you 've got to set it in the context that managers and the board ca n't exist on just an analysis of the general ledger . ’ |
18 | Of course much of China goes on just the same , shrugging off time . |
19 | Much of China goes on just the same , shrugging off time , while for Business Studies and Public Relations students life looks pretty rosy . |
20 | The sooner Evelyn tells her what really goes on here the better , he thought . |
21 | Once he acted the part of Asquith in some amateur dramatics , and danced round the stage with ‘ Lloyd George ’ , singing most comically a refrain which he wrote himself . |
22 | Rapid progress across country is largely a matter of finding and using effectively only the very strongest of thermals . |
23 | And the increases are likely to carry on now the plunging pound has made Britain such an economically attractive place for overseas visitors , the British Tourist Authority said . |
24 | Yeah , that 's what I land on nearly every time ! |
25 | In order to channel most effectively the social security funds then available to individuals to enter residential care , the benefit would no longer be paid direct to the individual . |
26 | The methods he used then had altered little over the years , but he was aware change was in the air . |
27 | But the subject of justice itself , harked on mainly the legal aspect which these notes deal with , is I think one of the most penetrating subjects have affect all our lives . |
28 | the meat is not allowed to go on just an ordinary pallet . |
29 | half G T half G T squared plus some constant times time normally your the the G will be a negative half A T squared but someone had said come up with that equation , and you 've said well what are you going to give me to go on well the acceleration 's constant . |
30 | I used to enjoy the singing a lot but sometimes the preachers used to go on quite a bit . |