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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Newquay and Ilfracombe are each about an hours drive and worth a visit .
2 ‘ The music scene is very male dominated and there is little for the girls ’ he said .
3 There was little for the crews to do .
4 Maybe it has been charging too little for the uncertainties involved , but that is another matter .
5 But 3p off a litre of petrol will do little for the men at Ford who need their jobs .
6 If the room be too mean , and too little for the books ; if it be too much out of repair ; if the situation be inconvenient ; if the access to it be dishonourable ; is the library keeper to answer for it ? …
7 If a flagrant oversight like this could occur it says little for the prospects of men of lowly status being correctly recorded .
8 I could have gone mad , you know , but the tragedy is that during the courses a lot of them and I expect that the best time to learn is when you 're young and you 're more receptive .
9 Both national survey data and smaller in-depth studies now enable us to document at least some of the financial effects of care-giving on women , although we still know very little about the consequences for women who begin or continue to give care in their own old age , or about the experiences of Black women carers .
10 Of course , the motivation for playing this game is all the stronger when we have reason to resent the ‘ out group ’ for being more powerful or better resourced than we are , or not subject to the strains , pressures and tensions we face ( of course , because they are an ‘ out group ’ we know little about the problems that they have and we do not ) .
11 ‘ They are young and inexperienced and they come mostly from cities and know little about the problems of rural people .
12 London , meditated Dexter — so many people crammed together , yet knowing so little about the others standing only a few feet away .
13 He says that many students knew very little about the drugs they were taking .
14 Many people know very little about the benefits that can be claimed by the elderly and those who are looking after them , or the free services to which they are entitled , so they often fail to claim something that is their right .
15 We know that black elderly people , for example , have very little contact with formal social services but we know far too little about the reasons for this .
16 As Scherer concludes , ‘ we know far too little about the methods of goal formation and conflict resolution within large organizations .
17 Labelling theory has revealed something of the genesis of individual theories of the self in society , but we know little about the mechanisms and occasions of large-scale learning of such things .
18 Before the Romans came on the scene , the Greeks knew little about the Celts .
19 A top-level report to the Engineering Council said admissions tutors , who vet applicants for places at university , were reluctant to accept design and technology A-level students because they knew little about the subjects themselves .
20 But we know very little about the animals which bore these scales and although a few articulated remains have been known for several years , they show very little anatomical detail and it is not easy to identify immediate relatives .
21 Gaily knew very little about the ways of church services , and so he sat halfway towards the back , looking at the coffin and the windows full of pale saints carrying lilies and the dust motes in the groin of the roof .
22 Yet , given the reality that a number of children were deprived and neglected and the shortage of sympathetic officials , who could in any case have done little about the causes of such deprivation , it is difficult to known what alternative measures were available .
23 However , they were poorly informed about costs , knew little about the alternatives to private in-patient treatment ( especially the option of NHS care ) and showed little inclination to choose their doctor or hospital .
24 How , do they do that through a friends group or ?
25 Having given Moses a glimpse of that through the fingers of his hand , God commands him to cut two tablets of stone to replace those which were broken .
26 He would say nothing more a– he led her this way and that through the streets , doubling back often , like a fox laying a foil .
27 Now if you take that through the examples they give , cos they 're quite good ones in there , it will mean a lot .
28 The fellows went like that off the corners — never asked to move .
29 The United Kingdom Egg Producers ' Association , which is meeting the legal costs of the nuns ' case , was ‘ pleased and surprised ’ with the ruling that the nuns should be paid the full market price of £1.42 each for the birds if they were slaughtered .
30 ‘ That 's $48.50 each for the stamps .
  Next page