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

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1 British Rail insist the whole problem though regrettable , will be ironed out within nine months .
2 Ensuring that the connector is exactly perpendicular to the ribbon cable place the whole assembly into a vice and slowly squeeze the parts together .
3 In A Book of Mediterranean Food his chapter heading illustrations occupy the whole width of the page and replace baroque extravagance with simpler , more pungent imagery .
4 These few words of Bishop Samson make the whole affair a matter of business-like common sense , more in keeping with the way in which government was developing than with Anselm 's grand and simple principles .
5 While we have particularly strong links with the media and the oil industry , other clients cover the whole spectrum of the Scottish community , from banking to manufacturing , from local government to public transport .
6 In an affected small bowel you will see the grey background with these tiny little curved rods present the whole area of the er , the villi is covered by the organisms which are er stuck down effectively by the processes which you ca , you ca n't really see them in the transmission micrograph , but they are attached to specific receptors on the surface of the entrocite membrane .
7 The worldwide acceptance of the need for supranational controls on the environment — given that the holes in the ozone layer , the greenhouse effect and tropical deforestation affect the whole planet rather than individual countries — has lent new respect and strength to the United Nations .
8 By contrast , the satellites scan the whole Earth surface several times a day , measuring the intensity of microwave radiation emanating naturally from oxygen molecules in the lower four miles of the atmosphere .
9 Cases cover the whole spectrum from those in which the jurist treats a legacy as a trust to those where he treats a trust as a legacy , plus one in which he seems to treat the trust as both .
10 In stew ponds , carp with these characteristics spawned with the true ‘ wild ’ carp to produce intermediate progeny — commons with the thickset build of mirror carp , or even fish known as ‘ fully-scaled mirrors ’ , where enlarged , reflective scales cover the whole body .
11 However , the last two lines change the whole mood of the poem :
12 If you record the drill it is recommended that in the production state you have the LH say the whole phrase after you .
13 Put another way , the All Blacks have the whole nation behind them , and even Wales can not quite claim that .
14 Well for slings , getting bags out of the hold see the whole job was so interesting , when you were doing these jobs that was interesting all the time .
15 What did daddy make the whole thing ?
16 Did daddy make the whole thing ?
17 A police spokesman said : ‘ These wild gun attacks by terrorists place the whole community at risk .
18 ‘ We think our proposals are quite modest given that some organisations want the whole countryside designated an ESA , ’ said a spokesman for the RSPB .
19 The elastic network of tiny family businesses and the high proportion of self-employed workers give the whole labour market a greater degree of fluidity than other leading capitalist economies .
20 might have Mrs B why we 're doing a group get the whole team .
21 Mostly , though , Asians find the whole thing an embarrassing distraction that they wish would just go away .
22 Some organisations pay the whole cost ( especially where long distances are involved ) ; others expect the employee to pay and some state that the employee pays the first £ x and the company pays the rest .
23 Many guests spend the whole day here , relaxing by the pool or sitting in the shade .
24 The British houses are concentrating on agency broking , while American firms cover the whole range of securities business .
25 Squeezed into an Islington drinking hole prior to an onstage engagement , Sam sips tentatively at a half of lager while the siblings go the whole hog and guzzle pints of water .
26 Early down-town theatres could rely on the casual trade , the ‘ droppers-in ’ , but small-town and suburban halls had to go after their trade and it was essential that managers acquaint the whole community with what was on offer .
27 She 's engaging brain it takes her some time to come out to the phone instruct the whole thing .
28 finding out how functional changes in the old person affect the whole family system .
29 The major line of development of the College has thus been its transformation from a teaching school attached to an equine infirmary , to a fully fledged university school in which teaching at undergraduate level and research of high standing encompass the whole range of domesticated animals , and where postgraduate courses meet the increasing demands of specialisation in such subjects as animal health , pathology and laboratory animal science .
30 The employers pay the whole cost of the benefits for employees and their dependants .
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