Example sentences of "[vb pp] [prep] these [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Further still , despite their gaps , Eadmer 's History and Anselm 's letters together allow a remarkably complete account of royal and papal negotiations and political vicissitudes to be given for these few years . |
2 | The kingdom may now have been partitioned between these two , as William of Malmesbury [ q.v. ] asserts . |
3 | But it is rather Sartre 's own text that seems to be caught between these two dialectical possibilities of expansion and compression in a double logic . |
4 | Music is caught between these two tendencies , and good music embodies both in a satisfying unity , at once affirming the objective movement of bourgeois society and also negating this through subjective critique . |
5 | It was an impossible situation for her — caught between these two beautiful protagonists , whose shared glances spoke louder than their tongues and in a language she had no difficulty in understanding ! |
6 | ‘ I had forgotten about these young appetites . |
7 | The level of performance expected for these remaining primary functions is : |
8 | No special diet ( mentioned the captain of Famagusta ) would be claimed for these two Lusignan hostages . |
9 | On that basis , and almost forgotten between these two dramatic giants , Newman commissioned and produced a science fiction serial for children in 1959 called Pathfinders in Space , a serial in seven parts , penned by Eric Paice and Malcolm Hulke — two authors who shared a friend in fellow writer David Whitaker , of whom more will be discussed in later chapters . |
10 | Nevertheless , as Primaflora was immoderately aware , he would not have come for these alone , with no heed for the heat of the day . |
11 | All teachers with designated responsibilities for pupils with special needs have the right to be considered for these one-term courses , which are now a national priority area for which central funding is available . |
12 | From a static point of view , the term ‘ divergent-dialect situation ’ can be understood in two senses : first , Belfast dialect ( for example ) is observed to be divergent from other dialects and , particularly , from ‘ mainstream ’ norms of language , such as RP and standard English ; second , the dialect exhibits a great deal of internal variation — much greater than is generally reported for these better-known varieties ( this is approximately the phenomenon that Le Page ( 1975 ) calls diffuseness ) . |
13 | Slotted between these two , the Dovecot is offering an insight into The Guardian 's long-running comic strip known as BIFF , with such intriguing episodes as The Aesthetics of Poverty and the irreverent God for Beginners . |
14 | Whatever is claimed of these traditional philosophical mysteries , including the claim that they enter into mental events , they surely can not be regarded as parts of them . |
15 | The reason we are reminded of these historical episodes , rather than any of a hundred others , comes clear only with the surprising and congested line that closes the quatrains about the Wars of the Roses : ‘ But oblivion , not thy forgiveness , FRANCE ’ . |
16 | The situation disclosed in these two letters is hard to disentangle . |
17 | The suggestion of hiring a car had almost come from these two ; it had been their talk of the small towns , the cedar woods , the mountains , which had fascinated Dan so much . |
18 | Bluestack Bill , the singer , must have come from these damp Colorado badlands . |
19 | This is demonstrated when other words are substituted in these different contexts . |
20 | Three ‘ theories ’ or sets of assumptions concerning the determinants of teaching quality appear to inform the analyses and recommendations contained within these influential government reports . |
21 | Degenerate versions of the HSV-1 Vmw175 binding consensus are contained within these recognized sequences . |
22 | Perhaps it would have been better to spout the usual platitudes about the skills of museum workers who have succeeded in these hard times in preserving and accumulating , acquiring and saving . |
23 | The Jockey Club Rooms , hung with many famous paintings of important horses , can also be included in these stimulating tours . |
24 | We therefore conclude that the provisions for payments contained in these two agreements … were incapable in law of creating a joint tenancy , because the monetary obligations of the two parties were not joint obligations and there was accordingly no complete unity of interest . |
25 | When a Palestinian political identity began to emerge after the 1967 Arab–Israeli war — when the West Bank and Gaza Strip were occupied by the Israeli army — the promise contained in these mundane implements and pieces of paper was somehow renewed . |
26 | Much of the data contained in these early systems will have been converted to paper tape , then magnetic tape , and today to hard-disks on personal computers , at each stage accruing data conversion costs . |
27 | The Court ruled that , even if the agencies staff were instructed to print out what they deemed to be records , the electronic material are ‘ quantitatively different than a copy printed out in paper form and , therefore the Defendants ’ record keeping system violates ( the statute ) because it does not save all the information contained in these electronic records . ’ |
28 | The custom of eating cheese with apple pie may have originated from these traditional pies , made from a very old recipe and which have slices of cheese actually cooked in them . |
29 | I would be chary of anything caught in these murky waters . |
30 | Accurate figures for the number of animals caught in these remote freezing areas are hard to collect , but those we do know show the situation to be alarming . |