Example sentences of "[adj] [conj] in [art] " in BNC.

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1 Some are working with the displaced or in the controlled zones , carrying out literacy campaigns and press or political work .
2 Whether in the SenFed or in the Freeworlds that have n't joined , there is simply no such thing as one hundred percent security .
3 Hotman 's case is particularly interesting in that where in the first version the word populus was used , in the 1576 edition the term ordines , meaning orders or estates , was inserted to " clarify " the meaning , or , we might suspect , to reassure those alarmed by the dangerously democratic sound of the first version .
4 If things had happened differently he , Lewis , would be living in a house like this or in a flat in central London with a cottage in the country as well .
5 These results confirm the notion that , under the reaction conditions applied , Dcm is methylated by SAM to a significant extent either directly at its active residue Cys 177 or in a reaction requiring Cys 177 for catalysis .
6 The second group has shorter seed longevity and rarer seeding , germination in the open in some or in the shade in others , trees living for 100–300 years and producing light to dark woods of medium weight .
7 However , when looking at speech at the level of the tone-unit we are not usually interested in this ; a much more important difference here is that between tonic stress ( marked by underlining the tonic syllable and placing before it one of the five tone-marks ) and non-tonic stressed syllables ( marked or in the head or in the tail ) .
8 Unless your rug is very old or in a poor state of repair — in which case a specialist cleaner should be consulted — the best way to remove grit and dirt is to use a carpet sweeper or vacuum cleaner with beater bars .
9 Now , just a short time after the ‘ Currency , Economic and Social Union ’ , almost 20 per cent of the workforce is unemployed or in a desperate situation as a result of the imposition of short-time working .
10 Most authorities lacked such a committee before this except in a shadow , non-statutory form within the majority party caucus .
11 It follows from this that in a recognition test subjects will find it extremely difficult to distinguish one of the early sentences in a passage from similar sentences which mean the same .
12 We can see from this that in the technical sense most large and many small organisations can be described as bureaucracies .
13 It will be apparent from this that in the event of LCH 's liquidation the clearing members would rank not as members but as creditors or debtors .
14 It seems clear that in a number of places the word for professional soldier has been misunderstood as meaning " thousand " .
15 It is clear that in a number of sectors concentration is significantly higher than in the economy generally .
16 Your author wishes to make clear that in no way are any aspersions being cast upon the firms involved .
17 It is clear that in the past many of them have considered loyalty to be a two-way process , a contract or covenant , and that the state could be a traitorous party as well as the people .
18 If one takes everything into account — the shifts in climate which might well remove the United States from its place as the leading ‘ food power ’ and affect the Soviet Union as well , the limited prospects for increased yields , desertification and the steady increase in the global population — it is clear that in the next century large sections of the world 's population will have a very narrow margin between them and starvation .
19 It is clear that in the eyes of Jesus ' contemporaries the cross was a contemptuous symbol .
20 For it is clear that in the traditional view a sexually mature woman should be sexually active .
21 But it is clear that in the case of God both ingredients are required — an act of trust and factual observation .
22 It is clear that in the period between the tenth century and the thirteenth all the categories were tending to grow .
23 And yet it is equally clear that in the minds of those who believed in his divinity , he was indeed a god .
24 It is quite clear that in the not too distant future arrangements will need to be made to enable those with non-graduate qualifications from the University , or with qualifications directly recognised by it , to continue some kind of formal association with the institution after the satisfactory completion of their courses .
25 The presence of Henry and his sons , together with their army , made a considerable impression on the Limousin , though it is also clear that in the months between June 1176 and October 1177 Richard had effectively wielded power in this region , quartering his Brabançons on monastic estates as he chose .
26 But credit should be given where it is due , and it is clear that in the years before the report the Goldsmiths were considering — still in a vague way and mindful of the possibility of a Government Inquiry — how " a more liberal observance of the apparent intentions of the Founders ' might be effected .
27 However , it is also clear that in the course of the inter-war period this concern came to be accommodated to such values as taste , tact , and decency that were characteristic of the male focused professions .
28 For comparison , the errors e in the two solutions ( 2 ) and ( 3 ) are ( the lines intersect at t =3 ) unc and it is clear that in the second case the errors increase markedly with t , as required .
29 It is quite clear that in the 17th and 18th centuries and , indeed , up to the enactment of the Judicature Act 1873 the courts , and in particular the Court of King 's Bench , consistently declined to exercise any jurisdiction over any matters in which a right of appeal lay from the benchers of an Inn to the judges sitting as a domestic tribunal .
30 It is clear that in the 1990s the demand will exist , particularly when demographic considerations such as changing family size are considered along with those already taken explicitly into account such as age and social class .
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