Example sentences of "[noun] [noun] [prep] the whole " in BNC.

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1 With no more than fourteen university lecturers in the whole country with a knowledge between them of five South Asian languages , there was clearly a dearth of linguistic knowledge in higher education which was unlikely to be rectified through new appointments , given the shortfalls in funding .
2 Other writers have used ‘ liberal ’ as a blanket term for the whole broad line of development which runs from Schleiermacher .
3 By 1925 , this early optimism had disappeared and the District continued to struggle at a financial subsistence level throughout the whole period , apparently incapable of seriously addressing the resolution of the problem of financial self-sufficiency .
4 There are also four new leaflets with Aran design : three traditional Aran patterns for the whole family and one mother and daughter cardigan with a lace zig-zag and cable pattern .
5 The golfer is as anxious to see the result that the head rises before impact , causing a lifting action of the whole body .
6 The further development of current techniques for measuring protein synthesis , in vivo , will be required to allow the contribution of each cell type to the rate of protein synthesis in the whole biopsy to be determined .
7 The need to ‘ take stock ’ after the first year of the school 's existence figured prominently , and recent publications from DES , HMI and the Schools Council regarding the whole curriculum ( see Chapter 3 ) also gave impetus to the activity ( although these documents appeared some time after the review had been initiated ) .
8 They examined current practice , investigated research work in the whole field of signposting , and considered the various factors which had to be determined when planning guiding systems .
9 ‘ And Mother Francis will be the Reverend Mother General of the whole Order and can do what she likes , and go to see the Pope , and everything . ’
10 Er i and it was given that image by pointing the cameras at at at the flats , and then spieling off the crime figures for the whole subdivision .
11 And it did seem to me that in the light of , erm , of the single regeneration budget , on the light of the need to be developing a regeneration strategy for Shropshire , perhaps the role of the County Council in this affair should actually be , er , as , as the local government for the county , should be to look at preparing a , a regeneration strategy for the whole county , at which the work that we do to economic development is one of the pillars of support as is the work that the districts do is another pillar of support , as is the work of the R D C and the objective five programme , and all the various other bodies that are involved in , in economic development and similar activities in .
12 By extending a kind of equal opportunities policy to the whole discipline , it tries to create a gender-neutral psychology , ‘ a non-sexist science , a psychology of human behaviour ’ ( Vaughter quoted in Unger 1979 : 24 ) .
13 In 1945 , when the war against the Third Reich was finally won , and the Allies had also defeated the Japanese Empire , the total loss of life , including the civilian victims of bombing and famine , was fifty-five million people ( a figure equivalent to the whole population of Great Britain in the late 1960s ) .
14 was founded by a French girl , Pauline Jaricot , over 150 years ago , and , in 1922 , was made by Pope Pius XI the official mission aid society of the whole Church .
15 There is a very clear , clean cut approach to the whole collection with the accent on strong graphics and sports oriented motifs to create renewed interest in the ‘ contemporary classic ’ shapes of the shirts , shorts , tops , sweaters , track suits , joggers and shell suits which make up the whole range .
16 It offers research training across the whole spectrum of the discipline of Geography .
17 According to Body , this swelling stream of public money has led to damaging distortions in agricultural systems and reduced the living standards of the whole population .
18 Booksellers could approach quantitative research in three ways : do it themselves ; do it mostly themselves and get the tabular data collected professionally : or use a market research agency for the whole project .
19 The pattern make little difference to the contraction of the knitting and your tension sample will show that only an occasional stitch increase across the whole width will be necessary to keep to the commonly used tension .
20 Ganglion cell density over the whole retina .
21 ‘ Peter is so detached from the pantomime element of the whole industry and the whole party ethic and so are The Smiths . ’
22 The intention in changing the eating habits of the whole community is to bring the average serum cholesterol levels down and so reduce the overall risk in the population .
23 The appointment of a practice manager was regarded as important by a third of firms with over fifty staff and the findings show that management systems tend to be much better developed in firms where decision making is in the hands of a single practice manager rather than , for example , in committee meetings of the whole partnership .
24 The Reichsmarschall also showed his Swedish intermediary maps of the whole German battleline , disposed to enter Poland .
25 After the microchallenge an abnormal value was found in four of 10 children from group A and seven of 10 children from group B. The intestinal permeability test result in the whole study group , expressed as cellobiose/mannitol % , was significantly correlated with the villous height/crypt depth ratio ( r=-0.323 ; p=0.042 ) and with the intraepithelial lymphocyte count ( r=0.50 ; p= 0.01 ) , but not with villous height or crypt depth .
26 I 'll take you back to erm , if you like , the ignition key of the whole sales structure .
27 A free-for-all jollification in the village hall for the whole laboratory including the cleaner , Mrs Bidwell , and old Scobie , the Laboratory attendant ?
28 In the main , this situation was created by , firstly , the distance between the units , especially the Regional Unit , and the communities in which the users live ; and , secondly , the lack of available staff with , for example , the local unit having the equivalent of two full-time staff to cover home visits over the whole area .
29 Thus has come about the present status of evolution of which man is the apparent culmination but not the real summit ; for he is himself a transitional being and stands at the turning point of the whole movement . ’
30 As the progenitor of this movement of ideas , Socrates must be regarded as the turning point in the whole history of civilization .
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