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

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1 The garrison finally capitulated at 4 pm , enabling the Duke to write complacently : ‘ Now we may have the happiness to say that this part of the kingdom is clear of all the rebels . ’
2 To end your pre-shoot planning session , pick one or two camera positions which will keep you clear of all the coming and going .
3 Swim clear of all the ropes , swim around to the back of the boat , pull the daggerboard down and then simply flip the boat upright again .
4 But nearly half of all the pasta eaten in Britain is the canned variety , which often owes little to its Italian ancestry .
5 Britain is a major market for US plywood — about a million cubic metres of the stuff comes across the Atlantic every year , nearly half of all the plywood we import .
6 The candidate who gets more than half of all the first preferences , is the winner .
7 Roughly half of all the CO 2 produced dissolves in the oceans , where some is photosynthesized by plants , is taken up by trees or is taken up within limestone ( calcium carbonate ) .
8 The London Boroughs had last been contested in 1986 when Labour won exactly half of all the seats and a small plurality in votes cast — see Table 1 .
9 Half of all the records since 1947 have been for the period mid-February to mid-April , particularly March , with 30 per cent. , which suggests that there is a fairly regular , although small , spring movement through the county .
10 Today nearly half of all the vines grown in the white wine vineyards of Champagne are of the Pinot Meunier variety — a practicality only possible because of Pérignon .
11 Indeed , the Consumer Credit Association ( representing predominantly weekly collection small credit traders and moneylenders ) told us that their members may turn down about half of all the applications they get .
12 Like the bricks in such a house , the protein molecules of the body are replaced ( ‘ turned over ’ ) so that , on average , half of all the protein molecules are changed every two weeks .
13 Half of all the meat eaten in the world is pig .
14 At the beginning of 1990/91 , under the leadership of Brian Eyre , the businesses came into being with nearly half of all the personnel transferring to business units .
15 I have also seen the important comments of the CBI , which set out the fact that Britain now attracts nearly half of all the inward investment from Japan that comes to the European Community .
16 Half of all the failures are because patients are dissatisfied with the functional results of this operation .
17 They will be able to keep half of all the treasure they find ( unrealistically generous , certainly ) but it will all have to be declared .
18 In a report on biodiversity , entitled Bringing Rio Home : Biodiversity in our Food and Farming , SAFE shows that in 1992 three varieties accounted for more than half of all the seed sown of winter wheat , spring wheat , barley , oats , rye , sugar beet and rapeseed ; the highest proportions were for spring wheat ( 86 per cent ) and oats ( 77 per cent ) .
19 Up to half of all the meadows in the east and south of the Netherlands have been seriously damaged by flocks of crows probing about among the grass roots for grubs of a dung-dwelling beetle which have appeared in much greater concentrations than normal .
20 Mr Geoffrey Hillcoat , Durham county council group traffic manager for road safety , told Darlington Cycling Forum on Monday that serious accidents in the town accounted for almost half of all the cycle injuries in the county last year .
21 Half of all the way round so how many would that be ?
22 The mower alters its fatal course not one half of half a degree .
23 It was in deficit in its trade with the outside world , calculated in Soviet domestic prices , but with its oil and other resources expressed in world market prices it was the only republic to have a positive balance in its trade with non-Soviet partners ; and it was the most economically self-sufficient of all the republics .
24 The most sumptuous of all the decorations was undoubtedly a huge Chinese Ming-dynasty celadon porcelain vase embellished with elaborate and highly wrought ormolu mounts incorporating ring-toothed lions ' heads of around 1760 .
25 Defining half-life as the time during which one-half of all the currently active literature in a subject field was published , Burton and Kebler discovered a bimodal distribution of half-lives , or two patterns of literatures of different half-lives , leading to their classification of literatures as either classical or ephemeral , depending on the half-life patterns observed .
26 The sooner she was free of such a boorish escort , the better , she thought angrily , taking a hasty step forward .
27 Back with Miss Maine I was shown what was thought to be the trickiest of all the work I must do .
28 Some of those the ministry is proposing are questionable , while schemes to help maintain the typical English farm and protect rare crop varieties such as traditional orchards have been ignored . ’
29 There 's a you know they used to put I suppose vanilla essence or some of these no almond would it be ?
30 I want now just to summarise and er some of these the features I 'm going to point out I 've I 've already stated so you may may just want to sit back and just take this in .
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