Example sentences of "[det] [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 And to hide the microphone under a table or behind a curtain , while guaranteeing the naturalness of the content , does little for the acoustic quality — and of course raises an issue that President Nixon memorably pioneered .
2 He had become used to much worse than that during the past few weeks .
3 Thus the real cost of £1,000 worth of BES shares to anybody earning more than that during the fiscal year , which starts on Monday , would be only £500 .
4 Proof of republican involvement in NICRA prior to 5 October 1968 actually says very little about the civil rights movement .
5 Many researchers fail to make the best possible use of libraries simply because they know so little about the bibliographical tools that are available to help them .
6 In the production or processing of discourse with a low degree of reciprocity ( for example , a manual , a road sign , a circular letter ) we can say very little about the individual identity of the person or persons in communication with us ; their name , gender , age , personality , appearance , and so on .
7 The typical end-user of GIS output will probably care or know little about the cartographic and uncertainty characteristics of the map data being used , while the GIS itself has no procedures for handling the varying accuracy and reliability of the digital map data being processed .
8 The Labour Party has done precious little about the political education of its members ’ .
9 However , knowing the activity tells us very little about the possible biological damage caused .
10 Although we know very little about the tenurial and ownership patterns of these sites , it is likely that some of the inhabitants actually owned land outside the settlement and grew their own crops .
11 We know too little about the internal social relations of some of the earliest collective and collaborative forms to speak with any certainty of that stage .
12 Last year the workshop session that followed Mr Barker 's presentation revealed that most publishers appeared to know very little about the financial realities of retailing .
13 Being able to machine knit gives no indication of the personality of the worker , in the same way that being able to drive a car shows very little about the actual driver .
14 The difficulty here is that central planning may know very little about the actual way of working of the different departments , so a theoretically superior plan may be impracticable .
15 Leeson , by nature taciturn , had told her very little about the original photograph and nothing at all about the research he and the Bristol archivist had done on it .
16 Police still know precious little about the dead man , least of all why anyone should want to kill him .
17 First , the approach says very little about the precise actors involved in the growth of government .
18 A smaller , more senior group of 150–200 top executives paid £1,750 each for a two-day seminar in Germany last year .
19 The shares were sold at $6.75 each for a total investment of $3.4m ; investors advised by Crabbe Huson own 2m shares , about 6.6% .
20 In 1989 passengers undertaking the full journey from London to Venice paid a one-way fare of £745 each for a double cabin with all meals included but drinks extra .
21 The quest of holists and of individualists , each for a particular type of explanation , marks the social sciences in two ways , one aggressive , one repressive .
22 In 1971 the small group of regular journalists at the Old Bailey received £150 damages each for the intolerable insult of being collectively described in " The Spectator " as " beer-sodden hacks " .
23 Along with a Chinese freelance photographer , Cavell had called for her that morning and whisked her round some of Taipei 's famous landmarks , the all-marble Chiang Kai-Shek Memorial , a colourful Buddhist temple , and the Grand Hotel with its magnificent Chinese architecture , pausing only long enough at each for the young man to take the photos that would help introduce Maria to the Taipei public , before escorting her back to the apartment and approving the outfit she planned to wear to the dinner the radio station was hosting for the rest of the local media that night .
24 The landing ships are expected to be fitted with two twenty metre cannons each for the dangerous and vulnerable trip up to the Gulf .
25 I mean I er er I mean I just do n't know how you , you begin and end with this actually I mean I really do n't and I mean I think quite frankly if Hydro Electric were to go out and say okay , we will fund the purchase of twenty houses four bedrooms each for the homeless right I would have thought in terms of doing something I mean I walk round Princes Street and I see those poor sods and I say to myself
26 Others require two bound copies , one each for the main university library and the departmental library .
27 They cost around £10–£15 each for the battery-operated models .
28 Under the federal Constitution adopted in 1901 , legislative power is vested in the bicameral Parliament , comprising a 148-member House of Representatives elected for a three-year term and a 76-member Senate ( 12 seats for each of the six constituent states and two each for the Northern Territory and the Capital Territory ) .
29 Under the Federal Constitution which came into force in 1901 , legislative authority within the Commonwealth of Australia is vested in a bicameral Federal Parliament consisting of the Senate whose 76 members ( 12 from each of the country 's constituent states and two each for the Northern Territory and the Capital Territory of Canberra ) are directly elected for a six-year term and retire by rotation , one-half from each state on June 30 of each third year ; and the 148-member House of Representatives elected for three years ; each state has its own legislature , government and constitution .
30 At the next stall backpackers browse through piles of fake Rolex watches — $1 each for an average wrist-life of six months .
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