Example sentences of "[adv] [prep] [pron] [vb mod] " in BNC.
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31 | These include such essentials as a preliminary sounding meeting with the head and whoever else is part of the school 's senior management ( i.e. anyone in a position to further the aims of the group ) to secure their sanction and support ; and an introductory meeting with as many of the staff as possible and manageable , for instance over a working lunch , regardless of who will eventually join the group , so that everybody knows what it will be about and interest is generated even in those who may not wish to join it . |
32 | When the deadline for judging whether the republics should be recognised arrives in January , will the 12 Foreign Ministers meet again to decide collectively whether the criteria have been met and whether all of them will recognise or not recognise the republics ? |
33 | ‘ In countries like Australia and New Zealand the leading players play in the region of 25 rep games a season , perhaps a dozen or so of which will be full internationals . |
34 | P.B. All of this , which would go I think contrary … much of it would go contrary to the basic Catholic belief . |
35 | We found that practices were very diverse , that people had different impressions , not only of what ought to be done , but what was in fact being done . |
36 | THE INSPIRALS move down to the Harbour area and sit on a green patch with the sun beating down like it can rarely do in Oldham . |
37 | I 'm just so behind I ca n't believe it , it 's like |
38 | I have so far dealt only with what might be considered extraneous matters which are of little concern to the non-collector , who can read and enjoy a book without worrying about endpapers , half-titles , advertisements and the rest ; though even the ordinary reader must reach a point where bibliographical matters begin to impinge . |
39 | no gently with her would you ? |
40 | The importance of practising empathy , especially with what may appear strange and uncongenial , is a major aspect of RE . |
41 | the question arises whether , in relation to any particular post , there is adequate potential to meet the needs of the firm , so notwithstanding what might otherwise be a desirable policy of providing career opportunities , this issue needs to be looked at closely . |
42 | Both Britain and France found difficulty in obtaining sufficient volunteers for their fleets , partly because the wages they offered their sailors compared very poorly with what could be obtained by service on a merchantman , and still more so with what might be made on a successful privateer . |
43 | ‘ The gentleman who 'd been in with her would naturally have gone back to his room well before people started stirring . ’ |
44 | They also review the history of the main hypotheses of atherogenesis : response to injury , lipid infiltration , monoclonal smooth muscle proliferation , thrombogenic ‘ encrustation ’ , and autoimmunity , but they weave these together into what can fairly be called a consensus view . |
45 | Along with them will go the ents and the dwarves , indeed the whole imagined world of Middle-earth , to be replaced by modernity and the domination of men ; all the characters and their story , one might say , will shrink to poetic ‘ rigmaroles ’ and misunderstood snatches in plays and ballads . |
46 | He had no official status and no powers of arrest , but once he 'd identified Alina then the two officers along with him would have been able to detain her on immigration charges . |
47 | All members are believed to have the life-force within them , and they insist that only within themselves will they find what Christians call God . |
48 | The need for a third dimension arises most obviously from what may be called the problem of philosophy . |
49 | What you do depends very much on who might be watching , often with good reason . |
50 | The return of a Tory Government with a workable majority of 21 has denied the Ulster Unionists the balance of power and the chance to drive a hard bargain with a minority administration , and they will now buckle down to what will be tough negotiations over the next few months . |
51 | We 'll see when we come , when it comes down to it wo n't we ? |
52 | Why it lay down er just down the road as you turned down to it used to be across the fields . |
53 | It therefore comes down to who should develop the guidance . |
54 | We sometimes get the feeling that not all the bodies that come down to us need have done . ’ |
55 | One good example of it is a fabliau called Sire Hain et Dame Anieuse , " Sir Hatred and Lady Obnoxious " , where an antagonistic husband and wife fight a crudely physical and violent battle , literally over who should have the trousers . |
56 | Let's start all over we can start all over , yeah . |
57 | Dotted all over you can see the symbol of Wenceslas IV — a kingfisher and a towel . |
58 | But the island covered three thousand , six hundred and forty square kilometres , she 'd read in her guide book , and the chances of running in to him must be the equal amount of kilometres to one anyway . |
59 | These arguments as to public reaction and " trouble " for the social worker apply only to what may be seen as more considerable reforms — the relaxation of strict sexual control in most residential institutions , a greater measure of sexual tolerance for the mentally handicapped , plainer recognition of the sexual needs and problems of earlier adolescence ( even pre-adolescence ) and so on . |
60 | In materials composed of sand-sized particles this depth is just a few millimetres , but in clay-sized materials in which the voids are or less across it can be tens of metres . |