Example sentences of "[noun pl] [adv] [adv] [vb base] " in BNC.
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1 | we may assume that households will move so as , in effect , to subscribe to the clubs ( local governments ) whose policies most closely match their own preferences . |
2 | It spends heavily on its undercover services and Britain is the country whose policies most vitally affect it . |
3 | Experts most frequently explain this regional division by pointing to conflicting interpretations of the hadith ( the sayings attributed to the Prophet Mohammed ) by the different Islamic sects . |
4 | In movements such as ‘ hi-tech ’ , objects most clearly come to exhibit a principle of utility quite detached from any consideration of actual purpose , as the style is applied ( as was streamlining in its day ) indiscriminately to steam irons or armchairs . |
5 | Gamma ray satellites so far have shown the distribution of interstellar gas ( where it is struck by cosmic rays ) , pulsars , and two dozen powerful but as-yet-unidentified sources . |
6 | I went across the course to the stands side to see the horses in the paddock , and then I went up to the very comfy Tribune des Dames , for which the French Racing Authorities so generously send me a badge each year . |
7 | So easily did the rational fear of not being able to exchange their products so advantageously merge , for a whole generation , into the absurdity of supposing that they could somehow have access to a source of wealth other than their own production . |
8 | ‘ The investigations so far have shown no evidence of such an elaborate organization , ’ Kopyion seemed to answer before he 'd finished . |
9 | Providing that the standard blade is set correctly , that is , the saw teeth only just penetrate the wood being cut , we found that the blade produced just as good results when cross-cutting . |
10 | WACC has acquired a certain expertise in this field , but its activities so far have been confined to a few countries or sub-regions . |
11 | It is sometimes said that butlers only truly exist in England . |
12 | There is still some way to go before we have an agreement on economic and monetary union , but the discussions so far have shown that it is possible to thrash out a sensible position in negotiations . |
13 | All the houses along there have . |
14 | This is what dealers always try to do and this is precisely where women artists so often fall down . |
15 | No wins so far mean that Amthaal slips in the race on 7st 12lb and he showed plenty of promise at Chester last week — racing for the first time in five months . |
16 | Colleagues , I know that people are starting to move out , and I 'm sure that it 's got nothing to do with Mick 's appearance at the rostrum , but colleagues seriously , seriously for the last couple of days we 've had a great deal of disciplines so please try and be as quiet as possible . |
17 | Do n't more than three times all right thank you very much for your help there . |
18 | Such contracts so far account for around 15% of most institutes ' funds . |
19 | But there is every reason to suppose that there already existed that division which makes the Church of the later Middle Ages so strangely resemble a military hierarchy , with the upper clergy as commissioned officers , the rural deans and archpriests as N.C.O.s , and the parish clergy as privates . |
20 | From these profiles it will be established which , if any , indicators most clearly differentiate between groups at different income levels . |
21 | The 8 successful trips so far speak volumes . |
22 | These are relations which hold between lexical items whose syntactic distributions only partially coincide . |
23 | When Florence of Worcester draws elements of his account of the battle of Assandun in 1016 from Sallust he is revealing quite a lot about the classical interests of twelfth-century historians , but also raising doubts about his own reliability , and William of Malmesbury , whose methods so often find favour with modern scholars , nevertheless records miracle stories which his critical faculties ought to have led him to doubt , and perhaps did ; and like historians of all periods , William , Florence and their colleagues were at the mercy of the bias and inadequacy of their sources , as well as their own prejudices and errors . |
24 | Whatever the mix of capital investment and labour , new designs only rarely emerge from Glascoed : each has to have survived the tortuous processes of ministry procurement and the logistical rigours of subcontracted production — often involving half a dozen other factories , sometimes more . |
25 | In other words , manners not only make the man , but lack of them make men into animals . |
26 | Pre-literate peoples not only agree with modern taxonomists about species , but in at least some cases agree in identifying the same higher categories . |
27 | However , the collectable aspect of the genre is also a factor : fans not only want their favourite author 's books in hardback , they want the paperback , the graphic novel and the T-shirt as well . |
28 | This has guaranteed not only resources but also access to national databases not always open to others . |
29 | Many of these animals not only have to contend with a changing landscape due to human development ( ! ) but also human greed . |
30 | These animals not only have five pigments in their retinas but also each cone has an oil drop which filters the light , narrowing the band of wavelengths it responds to . |