Example sentences of "[prep] [adv] in [art] " in BNC.

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1 It was my role to lead the squadron off and that night we were bound for somewhere in the Ruhr and we were on the short runway at Oakington .
2 Of such undertakings all that can be predicated is that some breaches will and others will not , give rise to an event which will deprive the party not in default of substantially the whole benefit which it was intended that he should obtain from the contract ; and the legal consequences of a breach of such an undertaking , unless provided for expressly in the contract , depend upon the nature of the event to which the breach gives rise and do not follow automatically from a prior classification of the undertaking as a " condition " or a " warranty " .
3 The use of a petrol block on a diesel engine is not a problem as the parts are exactly the same The problem is with the crankshaft The diesel unit is of forged steel and carries a ‘ D ’ stamped on the web of the crank The petrol version , whilst sharing exactly the same dimensions is marked P and it is made from cast iron and will not run for long in a diesel unit — as you have discovered Some military petrol engines however are fitted with the forged steel crank and these will fit and run in diesel units
4 Finally , it should be noted that high U/Pb does not survive for long in the convecting mantle ; otherwise the magnitude of Pb isotopic heterogeneity in basalts would be greatly increased .
5 This fantasy world of natural lust , ironically , can scarcely ever have been more closely realized than in the appalling conditions of the urban poor in the sordid back streets and alleys of prosperous Victorian cities ; but it could not , of course , be permitted to endure for long in the theoretical world .
6 No shaman was present to preside or to ask for God 's blessing upon Artai 's reign , Alexei saw , for it was a fact that there was no such thing as organised religion on this world , and even casual superstition was not permitted to interfere for long in the affairs of men .
7 Subtle but damning variations of idiolect are unlikely to count for much in a country where people go around wearing tee-shirts inscribed with things like ‘ The essence of brave 's aerial adventure : the flight 's academy of the American east club with the traditional gallery of Great Britain diesel ’ .
8 But he proved , when he joined the illustrious band of Yorkshire bowlers to take 1000 wickets for the county , that experience and craftsmanship still count for much in a game which seems to reserve its greatest acclaim for the lean , young gunslingers .
9 There was little hope that it would weigh for much in the balance of political life until then .
10 The simple fact that it 's not an adequate form of research does n't count for much in the commercial field .
11 Free parking is available after 7pm in the Westwood pay-and-display car park behind the nearby Comet store .
12 ‘ And it 's a better hiding-place than out here in the country .
13 ‘ Then what are you doing out here in the first place ? ’
14 Having toured together before , both bands join forces again on September 15 for Not In The City at the Manchester Ritz , Smith 's two-fingered salute to his hometown 's official music seminar week .
15 More Hyper Hyper boutiques of this sort are now promised for elsewhere in the UK and Europe .
16 Well the weather forecast for tonight in the East Midlands , rain and cloudy with mist over hills and the rain rather persistent with some heavy bursts as well .
17 On the livestock side Stuart Ashworth warned that beef producers should brace themselves for a cut in the Beef Special Premium ‘ the base for Scotland is 244,000 male animals but there will be at least 300,000 head this year so we can anticipate a cut of somewhere in the region of 20-25 per cent in BSP payments .
18 I mean you 're you 're not sort of right in the centre of town , but
19 If all went well he could be back happily planting seeds in the vegetable patch with his mother , instead of alone in the corridors .
20 The Tonik suits were being worn in the day instead of only in the evenings .
21 It reveals that man is essentially cast in the mode of being-in-the-world , and moreover that the world itself can be made sense of only in the context of man 's own " projects " .
22 This was an important new step , the immediate advantages of which are involvement in all aspects of teacher training , instead of only in the training of secondary school teachers with which the Department of Educational Studies was previously concerned , and the broadening of the University 's own activities in accordance with the general changes now taking place in higher education .
23 I thought it was a towing bar for that , but it 's another boat sort of down in the in the se se harbour .
24 Keep all the things listed below together in a special first aid container .
25 The definition of public necessity was a comprehensive one , and prevented the too casual adoption of what Jehan had learned from Alexei were thought of elsewhere in the universe as simple technological advances .
26 The early part of the band 's career witnessed incredible international success , making them undoubtedly the best known exponents of rockabilly in the world — no mean feat for three guys just out of their teens .
27 He was preparing a series of six documentaries with the overall title of Once in a Lifetime and said the situation regarding the Women of the Year lunch fitted in perfectly .
28 Downstairs what he ( he would ) called ‘ the lounge ’ is a beautiful room , much bigger than the other rooms , peculiarly square , you do n't expect it , with one huge crossbeam supported on three uprights in the middle of the room , and other crossbeams and nooks and delicious angles an architect would n't think of once in a thousand years .
29 No and you see it 's just them two I think they could put him sort of like in the hall and if there 's a
30 I have n't seen any primroses sort of like in the hedges yet
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