Example sentences of "[vb -s] [adv] the [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 The problem involves rather the ways in which Hegel has been read , absorbed and adapted .
2 A second dimension to real co-ordination involves only the donors , whose policies outside the aid arena may conflict with those within it .
3 And Thucydides describes no sharper conflict than that between the aggressive Spartan Sthenelaidas ( i.86 ) and the more cautious King Archidamus ; for the supposedly more ‘ open ’ society of Athens he records only the views of Pericles and an anonymous delegation which does not contradict him .
4 Youth unemployment has since the mid-1970s been a central fact or a central fear of many young people , and has affected many others .
5 Proctor 's ( 1990 ) research illustrates nicely the conflicts which emerge between managerial and professional perceptions of " quality " as a result of these endeavours .
6 Win/U reportedly needs only the Windows application 's source code , which is then recompiled and emerges running native on any brand of Unix under Motif .
7 Electrical forces are basic to the system , being attributes of the sub-atomic particles , and it is electrical attraction which holds together the atoms and molecules .
8 In 1878 Frobenius showed that relinquishing the commutative law of multiplication adds only the quaternions to the list , and using algebraic topology Bott , Milnor and Kervaire showed , in 1957 , that relinquishing in addition the associative law adds only the Cayley numbers .
9 Its fee , says Domini , covers only the costs of hazardous waste disposal .
10 And as he tells the story of one Irish politician who was emblematic of the past — Fianna Fáil TD Sean Doherty — he strips away the layers of fiction and delusion underpinning both Doherty and his critics to touch the pulse of an Ireland distorted by the rhetoric of the newsroom and debating chamber .
11 Yet the Hall resistance at the plateaux has exactly the values expected from free-electron theory ( see Box ) .
12 One form of this dictionary contains just the root-forms of words and a set of codes which indicates the manner in which a word may inflect .
13 ‘ Tony has just the skills we need to give cricket the right image , ’ a Test and County Cricket Board insider said .
14 It seems that in some areas schools lost interest in the DCSL visits once the books were on the shelves .
15 Then they are inside , waiting while he scrapes home the bolts .
16 Television , especially highlights both the strengths and defects of the modern player , and the papers continue the process of daily analysing players and teams .
17 ‘ His , er , surcoat has both the lions of England and the lilies of France because we were laying claim to the disputed French throne at the time .
18 In this sense , studying mutations is a bit like using inhibitors to block particular metabolic processes , and has both the strengths and weaknesses of such methods , discussed in the previous chapter and in Criterion Four .
19 The defence of honour as a theme gives emotional and moral substance to a book that has also the ingredients of a junior adventure story .
20 It is , however , worth stressing what Jessop has said in support of his own neo-Marxist approach to the analysis of power and the state , because it emphasises both the strengths and weaknesses of the Marxist school of writings : ‘ an adequate theoretical analysis of the state [ and power ] must consider not only economic determinations but also those rooted in the distinctive organisation of the state as well as in the social division of labour between officialdom and people ’ .
21 The range of views put forward in a small sample of recent works on the subject ( see Abbott , 1987 ; Berardi , 1985 ; George , 1985 ; Tullis and Hollist , 1986 ) , illustrates well the complexities of the issues and the difficulty of solving them .
22 But what we can do is give the children all the knowledge that this boy has without the experiences .
23 Worthy though that organisation 's aims may be , it has neither the resources nor the authority to undertake the vital work which the United Nations has given it .
24 The college can not justify the use of its facilities , let along expand its activities , as it has neither the resources or required support facilities .
25 Michael Young , in his paradoxically assumed role , quotes approvingly the strictures of Lord James on misguided attempts to generalize an élite education :
26 This section describes only the listings available from LISTREL , the LIFESPAN Relationships Listing Program .
27 This section describes only the facilities available from VALIDATE .
28 The ability to diagnose the disease takes scientists one step closer to controlling , preventing or even curing the condition which steals away the memories of a lifetime .
29 I. iv , ‘ Revisits thus the glimpses of the moon ’ , BH 10 .
30 The market says close the pits .
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