Example sentences of "[prep] [adj] [noun pl] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Darren Wigg ( Newcastle ) won the award for 11–12-year-old boys with four first places , and Mark Bewick ( Sunderland ) topped the 13–14 group with a hat-trick of wins .
2 Francis and Wollen have also contributed articles ( one each ) both of which appear in both books as introductory statements on the Situationist International .
3 They abandoned as unrealistic the " 50 per cent gap reduction " formula for eleven zones with the most damaged soils , forest and lakes .
4 She and her husband ran a restaurant for eleven years before opening up Ford Farm in 1973 .
5 Maternal mental illness may adversely affect a child both directly — causing neglect , physical harm , and psychological upset — and indirectly — through associated features of the illness such as marital disharmony and repeated admissions to hospital .
6 Only Rugby Union holds out against the commercial tide despite widespread speculation about covert payments to players .
7 Even so , code switching in such conversations is the norm for British-born speakers in my sample .
8 By contrast , the report calls for professional investors to be exposed to the principle of ‘ caveat emptor ’ — ‘ let the buyer beware ’ .
9 As we have shown , it remained a separate establishment following the reorganization of public sector higher education in Wales and it is now widely recognized as a national institution offering full-time and part-time courses for professional performers of Music and Drama , together with honours BEd .
10 This year , in prize money alone , there is well over $100m available for professional players round the world , including team events such as The David Cup and The Federation Cup .
11 The ‘ bibliographical division ’ is divided into subject groups , each of which is responsible for professional duties in one service point of the authority , and also for all the bibliographical responsibilities in the subject field allocated to it .
12 Hospitality is the magazine for professional managers in the hotel and catering industry and now reaching all of its senior executives .
13 Determined not to let herself be beaten by such obstacles , Prue came up with the idea of a luncheon club for professional women in the Exeter area .
14 Service Sector — For professional firms in the service sector a typical resource constraint is the lack of the necessary professionally qualified staff needed to meet client demand .
15 There may also be more room for professional bodies to discipline those whose conduct has not come up to expected standards but where proving dishonesty in a court would be hard .
16 This promised to be a difficult task ; hence the need for professional economists in the cabinet .
17 This left the couple facing a bill for professional costs through no fault of their own .
18 This left the couple facing a bill for professional costs through no fault of their own .
19 publications from the Institute for the Study of Drug Dependence ( ISDD ) including ‘ Drug Abuse Briefing ’ ; a booklet on solvents in their ‘ Drugnotes ’ , series ; and a booklet for professional workers with young people
20 For professional workers like solicitors and accountants , there may be greater discretion , but typically the individual 's work/leisure choice may be far more constrained .
21 The Government propose to Brussels that the same upper limits be set on dosages of dietary supplements for ordinary consumers buying off the shelves as for professional practitioners of alternative medicine , even though such practitioners may have good reasons for recommending higher doses to their patients .
22 It should be noted that if the settlor was domiciled outside the United Kingdom when he made the settlement but was either resident or ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom at that time , this special relief for professional trustees in s69(2) would not apply .
23 It seems essential to look explicitly at the implications of the interpretation of normalisation for professional styles of working .
24 It concerns evil spirits which are seen as rebellious creatures of Yahweh , bent on wrecking his purposes but ultimately subject to his control .
25 Minister for Aboriginal Affairs v. Peko-Wallsend Ltd. ( 1986 ) 162 C.L.R. 24
26 However , in Minister for Aboriginal Affairs v. Peko-Wallsend Ltd .
27 Conversations between agricultural workers on the edge of subsistence constantly refer to the city : a city that exists nowhere but which continually transmits promises ' .
28 The moral panic generated by scroungerphobia represents homeless men as feckless fugitives from their proper role .
29 Of the 415 cases of death in custody recorded by Amnesty International since 1985 , police officials were imprisoned for murdering prisoners in just three cases .
30 They were also , however , profoundly suspicious of proposals for state welfare , which they identified as a means of diminishing working-class control over their own lives and as palliative substitutes for the workers ' just demands for control over the means of production , high wages and full employment .
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