Example sentences of "[adj] [prep] [Wh det] the " in BNC.
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1 | She hesitated before answering , still apprehensive about what the next day would bring . |
2 | For its part , Scottish Nuclear has also embarked on a programme to reduce the cost of electricity it produces for the Scottish power companies from 3.2p per unit last year to a target level of 2.5p to ensure the operation remains financially strong and profitable for whatever the future might hold . |
3 | If I am right about what the fluke genes are doing , it follows that we can legitimately speak of fluke genes as influencing snail bodies , in just the same sense as snail genes influence snail bodies . |
4 | The Julians subscribed to the idea that one grew and was grateful for whatever the country best produced . |
5 | I welcome the Government 's initiative to help the homeless , and we are grateful for what the Department of the Environment has done . |
6 | I am grateful for what the hon. and learned Gentleman has said . |
7 | I am grateful for what the hon. Gentleman has said , because it enables me to explain that proposals for a local income tax relating it to ability to pay have been rejected in Committee and on Report , so we are now in the business of trying to improve this unfair tax which is based on property . |
8 | The person you are dealing with will also find it far easier to be helpful if she/he is clear about what the problem is and what you want . |
9 | Before the selection process begins , candidates need to be clear about what the job abroad entails . |
10 | Moving on to the question of defenders stopping the try by not standing on the goal-line , Law 27(e) is clear about what the offending team must do : ‘ The opposing team must run without delay ( and continue to do so while the kick is being taken and while the ball is being played by the kicker 's team ) to or behind the line parallel to the goal-lines and 10 metres from the mark , or to their own goal-line if nearer to the mark . |
11 | ‘ Local interpretation ’ probably relates to another strategy which instructs the hearer / reader to do as little processing as possible , only to construct a representation which is sufficiently specific to permit an interpretation which is adequate for what the hearer judges the purpose of the utterance to be . |
12 | Despite a piddling little incident in Aberdeen in 1989 when he was reported to the Procurator Fiscal for what the law delicately describes as ‘ a public nuisance offence ’ , Nicholas began to re-build his reputation at Aberdeen , a city whose heritage was built on fish and has the highest concentration of chip shops in Scotland . |
13 | Again , Howell is unequivocal about what the event — which is also organised by Glasgow Development Agency , Scottish Software Federation , itacs at Strathclyde University and the computing science department of Glasgow University — should achieve . |
14 | Er you must you must be clear of what the right answer is . |
15 | They are less afraid of what the community will say . |
16 | Between the two of them there grew up so great an affection that King Henry was much alarmed and , afraid of what the future might hold in store , he decided to postpone his return to England until he knew what lay behind this sudden friendship . " |
17 | The little goblin , who was terribly afraid of what the king of the vookodlaks would do to him if Yanek went home to look after his grandfather , gave him a great push . |
18 | She licked her dry lips , afraid of what the next few minutes would reveal . |
19 | What do you think is wrong with what the assistant is saying ? |
20 | What a fellow member of its same species sees of it , is quite different from what the individual feels about itself . |
21 | James and the Nazarean hierarchy send their own missionaries in his wake , to undo his preaching and compromise him with his own converts — for Paul , by now , is preaching something very different from what the Nazareans themselves , under Jesus 's brother , have sanctioned . |
22 | And of course he meant something probably rather different from what the popular meaning is . |
23 | At Isleten a narrow mountain road ( used by the postbus ) also swings off to the left , running for 19km ( 12 miles ) to the rocky and romantic Isenthal from which the ascent to the ice-capped Uri Rotstock is approached . |
24 | Suddenly other EC countries are interested in what the British have to say . |
25 | Our styles were so very different that we were both interested in what the other was doing . |
26 | It must be remembered , however , that the Gospel writers are not concerned simply with history but are also interested in what the event of the birth of Jesus means ( see chapter 1 ) . |
27 | BELOW Dawn and I used to watch a lot of television while I was training her , but she was always easily distracted — she 's obviously much more interested in what the photographer is doing . |
28 | The algebraist is , however , little interested in what the integers are ; he is mainly interested in the fact that these integers , whatever they may be , are added and multiplied together , two at a time , according to the following axioms ( where we use the symbol " . " |
29 | I suppose they imagined we were going to expose their uninteresting little rackets , whereas I was only interested in what the Josephs were up to . ’ |
30 | People living and working in Lothian , visitors , those wishing to invest in the area , and those providing services , will all be interested in what the Plan has to say . |