Example sentences of "[adv] [prep] [art] new " in BNC.
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1 | His preparing himself so keenly for a new and final phase of the war , and then not seeing even the beginning of it , was the final irony . |
2 | If wide coverage is sought ( eg for a new Do-it-Yourself product or a new consumer banking service ) , then a television advertisement put out at a peak viewing time would be the most effective . |
3 | ‘ It seems to depend on how much credit people can afford , and at the moment it is just not enough for a new car , ’ said one high-street main dealer . |
4 | A northern sense of identity concentrated by the frustration of spirit that knows it could manage better what its southern overseers only botch is pressure enough for a new drive for progress . |
5 | But that was not enough for the new Chancellor , Denis Healey . |
6 | Meanwhile Yorkshire 's liquidity has held up and should guarantee the county at least another seven years ' existence , time enough for the new management and its overseas players to wave their collective wands . |
7 | At the last the weather has been descent enough for some of the crags to dry out long enough for the new routers to get busy . |
8 | Erm basically as a new market opportunities come he 's got ta develop er and adapt to those any new opportunities that do arise . |
9 | There is likely to be a far greater appreciation of home comforts but there may also be a reluctance to answer the barrage of questions or to say much about the new life . |
10 | So much for the new cars . |
11 | so much for the new man … what about his partner … what made Glenn Hoddle leave Swindon |
12 | They must be seen by us not only as a new type of settlement but as places with individual characters and their own idiosyncrasies . |
13 | On the other hand , there were ten bidders alone for the new Yorkshire contract . |
14 | They spent every night together between the new and the full moon . |
15 | More than ever before , this was a war in which one side was strongly supported by the mass of the population at large , sufficiently so for the New Model Army to be recruited from the mass of the peasantry in selected regions and to aspire to a meritocratic , rather than aristocratic , officer corps . |
16 | Foucault has even been accused of returning , in this work , to the concept of a totality in the episteme ; it has certainly been somewhat hastily assumed that the latter can be appropriated more or less as a new way of describing a historical ‘ period ’ . |
17 | ‘ Darlington is in great need of car parking in that area , especially as a new development in Russell Street will be taking many spaces away . ’ |
18 | In the mid-nineteenth century life expectation was rising , especially for the new middle class , and central and regional authorities were coming to terms with the urban influx , which had changed the face of Britain . |
19 | Now that there was a sympathetic hand at the helm , especially for the new sexual politics , they were shaped into formal applications for local government funding . |
20 | DHA 1 has been waiting patiently for a new DGH for 25 years . |
21 | A final statement declared : " We are determined to work together towards a new , lasting order of peace in Europe through dialogue , partnership and co-operation . " |
22 | In general such transformations involved secularization as much as professionalization and operated not only inwards towards the academy but also outwards towards a new constituency : the nation as a whole . |
23 | Whatever the outcome of the Higginson Committee 's inquiry may be , if we are to see a radical improvement in secondary education , we must learn to think not merely of a new form of examination ( and therefore presumably a novel kind of syllabus that will lead to it ) but of a wholly new approach to those studies that we wish to retain in the sixth forms at school , and how these studies are to relate to the pupils ' next step , when they leave school . |
24 | Schools ( perhaps excluding the new Technology Colleges ) should be judged according to academic criteria ; and these could be supplied , as they always have been , by the size of the sixth form and the number of entries to universities — that is , by A level results . |
25 | Some of the first signs that Britain and the United States might draw together against a new common threat appeared in the Middle East , a region ironically where the British had been particularly anxious to uphold their predominant influence , even against the Americans . |
26 | The chairman , Gubby Allen , asked Washbrook to leave the room , then argued fiercely with the new young captain , Peter May . |
27 | Griffiths realized that this situation could not be changed overnight , so under the new regulations the NHS will still be allowed to carry on providing long-term care if it wishes . |
28 | may be right in saying that in Greece there is ‘ very little employment in the private sector ’ , but he fails to mention that only under the new law people who fail to get tenure at universities are now eligible for employment in the public sector . |
29 | But the bulky fillings of ten years ago are now for the budget bags only with a new generation of low-bulk polyester waddings now available which turn in much better all-round performance than down . |
30 | It was appropriate that the BDA should go forth from the Bournemouth Congress , which set it on its modern course , not only with a new name and emblem but a new Patron . |