Example sentences of "[vb -s] [adj] in [noun] " in BNC.

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1 This frequency-multiplied signal is input to an m-state counter/decoder which has , each of which goes HIGH in sequence ( Fig. 7.10 ) .
2 But she has eased away and stands right in front of me , as close as you can get without touching , and her teeth are clenched and she almost glares into my face and her fist punches against my stomach as she says , ‘ Listen , you , ’ like it really hurts her .
3 The decentralized Evans model underestimates the amount of material which lies unused in departments for long periods of the year and which might be of value to another discipline , or to a pupil in the enquiry mode ; it certainly contains no element which would stress interdisciplinary thinking , inter.departmental cooperation or the sharing of acquisitions and experience .
4 Eutrophic flushed peat is flushed by seepage waters rich in mineral plant-nutrients and usually supports a wide range of plant species , including reeds , tall sedges and flush alderwood where not reclaimed .
5 Good figure drawing has little in common with an anatomical diagram , but if you do n't know the basic machinery , your drawings will be unconvincing .
6 The pale brand of modern faith which lapses into ‘ easy believism ’ has little in common with the virile attitude of understanding plus commitment which is the biblical notion of faith .
7 Good figure drawing has little in common with an anatomical diagram , but if you do n't know the basic machinery , your drawings will be unconvincing .
8 There 's a lot of metal in this desktop beast , which has little in common with the run-of-the-mill OEM machines that pass through the What Personal Computer office .
9 Accession to pre-existing standard form partnership articles has little in common with a freely negotiated agreement between parties with a broad equality of bargaining power .
10 If Dave looks interested in Andy and smiles encouragingly , his sub-text reads , ‘ I 'm looking forward to chatting with you . ’
11 Bands visible in lanes 1 , 2 , 7 , 8 and 13 are due to [ 32 P ] 5'-end labels introduced into the synthetic oligonucleotides as indicated ; bands in the other lanes are due to 3 H introduced into the reactions as tritiated methyl group of SAM .
12 Patrick Le Gall , a director with French TV station France 3 , believes Britain has much in common with Japan .
13 Having seen that double bed tuck has much in common with Fisherman 's Rib , we can also see that the fabric produced in this way will have many features that are the same .
14 The medical interview has much in common with counselling ( Joanning et al . ,
15 Hume 's complex moral philosophy can not simply be equated with emotivism , but it has much in common with it .
16 Furthermore , Hayek 's concept of ‘ spontaneous order ’ has much in common with Oakeshott 's idea of ‘ moral association ’ .
17 The view that the concern about the declining calibre of councillors has much in common with the opinion that Punch is not as good as it used to be , and the well-known response that it never was , can be supported from the details given in Table 7. 1 .
18 The other insists that science has much in common with model-making , which differs from mapping in the modeller 's licence to construct an artificial world and include in it all sorts of features beyond all possible observation .
19 This model has much in common with the dichotomy between ‘ post-material ’ versus ‘ traditional ’ attitudes much debated on the Continent ( van de Kaa 1987 ) .
20 The way we acquire " knowledge " of a fictional world has much in common with the way we acquire indirect knowledge , through language , of the real world ( see 5.2 ) .
21 I am a native of South Shields and grew up in a locality which has much in common with its other half .
22 What we have described as a topic framework has much in common with Venneman 's proposal that , for a discourse , there is a presupposition pool which contains information ‘ constituted from general knowledge , from the situative context of the discourse , and from the completed part of the discourse itself ’ ( Venneman , 1975 : 314 ) .
23 Clearly , it has its roots in , and has much in common with , the job enrichment and semi-autonomous group techniques of the previous two decades .
24 This schema has much in common with those developed by two others , whose writings have influenced this presentation .
25 Lakatos 's emphasis on the conventional element attached to work within a research programme , on the need for scientists to decide to accept its hard core , has much in common with Popper 's position with respect to observation statements , which was discussed in section 2 of the previous chapter .
26 Paragraph 1499 deals with larceny by intimidation ( which has much in common with one branch of robbery ) :
27 Not surprisingly , then , their package of proposals for constitutional change has much in common with the perspective set down in the last section .
28 His marks appear overstruck by that of Paul Crespin on ambassadorial plate issued to the Earl of Chesterfield [ q.v. ] in 1727 ; although George Wickes [ q.v. ] supplied the Bath presentation cup to Frederick Louis , Prince of Wales [ q.v. ] , in 1739 , it has much in common with a contemporary series of cups with De Lamerie 's mark .
29 It may already be evident that the stylistics of embellishment has much in common with the stylistics of self-reference , as both can involve the idea of deviation from some kind of standard .
30 In some respects this method has much in common with the structuralism of the Prague School ; there is an apparently similar interest in elements of deviation , and an apparently similar view of the literary text as a closely knit set of interrelated features .
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