Example sentences of "[adj] [to-vb] the many " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 It was interesting to see the many impromptu sketches made in situ , often as skilled as the finished work .
2 Increasingly , under LMS , schools will have the freedom to choose a local firm or individual to provide the many services they need to run effectively .
3 Although in everyday professional speech the phrase the in-service training of teachers ( INSET ) is often used to denote formal courses operated collectively with groups of teachers , this view of INSET must be perceived as too limited to describe the many practices which are used in the professional development of teachers ( Gordon and Lawton 1978 , Becher and Maclure 1978 ) .
4 It is not easy to survey the many areas in which there has been not only response to Dei Verbum , but also developments traceable to its influence , yet going far beyond what most of the Council 's members could have foreseen .
5 This three-star establishment is a sister hotel to the nearby Tyrol & Alpenhof hotels , and guests at the Haus Orplid are welcome to use the many facilities at these hotels .
6 A Chief Whip is in a special position to be able to understand the many strains in the lives of colleagues that are unheard of beyond the bounds of Westminster , and often unheard of except within very small circles in this place .
7 Vegetation is composed of the few plants that survive and grow : to explain that vegetation it may be more important to study the many that die .
8 where Trevor Rowley has been able to explain the many routeways as a reflection of the straker routes of commoners herding animals from lowland settlements to upland pastures .
9 A selection of excellent resource material was available to illustrate the many and varied schemes/programmes .
10 There were several reasons : most immediate , perhaps , was the need for uninterrupted production as war orders from Europe mounted ; secondly , the large size of the corporations and the new degree of union strength made it difficult to recruit the many thousands of strikebreakers for full-scale industrial warfare ; third , government pressures put the corporations on the defensive ; and finally , the entry of the United States into the war created a need for national unity .
11 It may prove difficult to co-ordinate the many specialised tasks and divisions that are required by the division of labour .
12 Workers in the pharmaceutical industry and in laboratories obviously have to be knowledgeable and skilled to avoid the many chemical hazards which can threaten the safety of their environment .
  Next page