Example sentences of "[vb pp] [prep] [prep] this " in BNC.

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1 What I would see this policy as doing would be simply to bring an element of restraint er which er would be formulated in way in which it would within the local plans so that tight boundaries would be drawn around settlements , the rest of the land would be designated as under this policy as E two land and the debate as to whether the extent of that land was necessary or not would be negated because it would be subsumed as being there simply er meeting the strategic policy .
2 He was happy and well looked after in this home .
3 FOOTBALL is probably not a F subject Darlingtonians F would care to be reminded of at this stage in a trying season .
4 We have a separate thing on sex ratios and I 'll explain why males are discriminated against in this , in this respect cos as we 'll see there 's a profound er reason why er this should happen .
5 There have been persistent reports of understaffing at Strangeways , is that one of the issues that will be looked into by this Inquiry ?
6 However , there had been a long and consistent course of dealing which was adhered to on this occasion .
7 Is that what democracy has come to in this country , with the democratically elected Government refusing to listen to the democratically elected Opposition — who will be unable to reveal the flaws in the council tax as we did in the case of the poll tax , and which were soon clear for all to see ?
8 The rest of the speech is saying that since the whole argument must have no excuse for what he is at the moment , it must be looked at like this : that when he becomes greater , he will become very dangerous to Rome : like a serpent still in the egg , which , when hatched , will become deadly .
9 Looked at from this new angle , the smears were only smears .
10 Looked at from this standpoint , the Court of the Tuileries seemed to be a tawdry affair governed by a spirit of careless frivolity where all was hugger-mugger .
11 Looked at from this angle , the mystery may not be such a mystery after all .
12 Looked at from this perspective , however , the distinction itself is not a very fruitful one .
13 Looked at from this point of view Gundovald 's revolt illustrates perfectly a major aspect of sixth- and indeed seventh-century politics , that is the tendency for those lacking royal support , either because of accidents of death or because they were in opposition to a particular monarch , to search out the favour of another king .
14 Looked at in this way theory then becomes the ordering of facts and findings in a meaningful way and this ordering and building up is of the very essence of scientific enquiry , since without ordering facts and without putting them into some systematic framework there can be no generalizations and no predictions .
15 Looked at in this way one sees empirical observations , facts , research studies , and so on , as contributions to this kitty and the bigger the kitty , the greater the development of the subject itself .
16 Looked at in this way , terrestrial zodiacs can have a role regardless of whether they are considered objectively ‘ real ’ or not .
17 Looked at in this light , and with conservation so constantly impressed upon us , I really ca n't see that the idea could be so shocking .
18 Two other dimensions of work which have been found less important in the case of the industrial worker are also looked at in this chapter : working hours and the technical environment .
19 Looked at in this way , ‘ Metropolis ’ was a good collection of ‘ facts ’ .
20 One of his key officers departed at around this time .
21 If such machinations are seldom heard of in this period it is unlikely to be because they were rare .
22 I have given only a very rough and general indication of how the model of teacher mediation I have presented and argued for in this chapter might itself be made operational .
23 The alternative to Regan 's typically liberationist view of animals , which I have argued for in this book and summed up in the concluding section of Chapter 6 , is that animals are primitive creatures .
24 Becoming educated in the way being argued for in this book requires a willingness and an ability to participate in a discussion oriented towards truth .
25 If the idea of higher education being argued for in this book can be summed up in one word , that is it .
26 The individual is the provider of material and data , is sought after for this purpose , is the bearer of social forces and is the agent of society itself .
27 What were houses made of at this time ?
28 She remembered the lover made up out of books and poems she had dreamed of all summer ; he crumpled like the paper he was made of before this insolent , off-hand , terrifying maleness , filling the room with its reek .
29 Meanwhile the other lawyer was growing impatient with Bartocci for allowing himself to be imposed upon in this way by his pushy and unscrupulous colleague instead of attending to his utterly reasonable request for bail or a visitor 's pass or access to official files .
30 The Queen Mother took the reverse stoically , writing to Cazalet a few days after the Grand National : ‘ We will not be done in by this , and will just keep on trying . ’
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