Example sentences of "[noun] to produce a [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Ambience meets ethnic techno rock to produce a refreshing departure from the usual death beat that can be heard pounding out of today 's club scene .
2 For example , Cortzee shows that contemporary tales of the ‘ tariff reform millions , are not borne out by the relatively impoverished state of the Tariff Reform League , and he demonstrates that the variety of industries and economic activities which were represented in the TRL defy any attempt to produce a simple definition of its interest base .
3 Roebuck , moved a famous and extremely detailed vote of censure on Palmerston 's foreign policy over a period of two decades , 2,000 – 3,000 volumes of manuscript correspondence were consulted by officials in the government 's attempt to produce a convincing rebuttal .
4 Pure research is an attempt to produce a coherent framework of the facts and events occurring in the world around us .
5 This attempt to produce a scientific scheme of ideas has been subjected to severe criticism which need not be repeated here ( see Simon 1957 ; Rose 1975 ) .
6 The intention to produce a full-scale study of Laxton , and also to make available for other researchers the methodology employed .
7 In 1930 , however , its name was changed to Revista Comunista , and the editors explicitly stated their intention to produce a theoretical journal rather than an information bulletin as hitherto .
8 Those audition sessions were produced by Bernie Anderson , who signed Tom Jones after hearing ‘ this scruffy Welshman who opened his mouth to produce a magnificent sound ’ but who was n't so impressed by The Rolling Stones , whose audition got the thumbs down .
9 OUR COMPETITION staged in the Stars n Bars special issue of FlyPast in which a lucky reader would be able to commission aviation artist Keith Hill to produce a one-off painting of the winner 's choice was hard fought by a record number of readers .
10 These five factors can in turn be broken down into a number of subsidiary aspects to produce a specific number of questions to be answered in identifying the likely longer-run attractiveness of the industry .
11 She has considerable musical talent herself ( in 1981 she was co-author , with June Bascombe , of the Medau Society publication Piano Improvisation ) and is an excellent exponent of the quintessentially Medau skill of influencing her class 's movement from the piano , adjusting tempo and rhythm to produce a new emphasis .
12 When the chart specifies a time outbound such as the 3 minutes on the adjoining pattern , such time is meaningless unless allied with a specific speed to produce a specific distance .
13 It demonstrates what appears to have been a major weakness of the UK economy , namely that the UK has required over the last twenty years a higher rate of gross investment to produce a given increase in output , than did West Germany , France , Japan , the USA or Canada .
14 For each item , the child is allowed a number of opportunities to produce a correct imitation .
15 If the child succeeds here , then the word ( for example , ‘ sun ’ ) is modelled in a sentence and the child is given a number of opportunities to produce a correct imitation .
16 Now he has channelled that aggression and raw talent to produce a golden combination of motivation and power .
17 ‘ As you know , I 'm an adequate , plain cook , but I 've neither the time nor the talent to produce a coq au vin like this one : it was produced by my neighbour , Mrs Neville , who is seventy-five years old and runs a thriving emergency cooking , house-sitting and general crisis-management service for the neighbourhood . ’
18 FIG. 2 Ca 2+ permeates NMDA channels to produce a transient signal in spines in response to tetanic stimulation .
19 A factory in China has signed a deal to produce a British car under licence .
20 A factory in China has signed a deal to produce a British car under licence .
21 There is evidence of large firms experimenting with flexible technologies and divisions of labour to produce a broader range of products and cater to speciality markets .
22 The technology itself — originally developed by IBM to produce a higher speed packaged dye on silicon for its thermoconduction module — takes multiple silicon or ceramic wafers and lies a high density raw dye on top of it , which binds a series of chips in a single package .
23 Dr Michael Turega , of the University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology , has worked with a casualty ward consultant to produce a desk-top computer consisting of just 35 ‘ brain cells ’ to give reliable diagnosis of chest pain in patients .
24 Indeed , while there is concern over the long-term effects of population losses from northern regions of Britain , in some circles there appears to be even more anxiety about the failure of migration to produce a speedier matching of workers to jobs ( Department of Employment , 1986 ; Minford , 1985 ) .
25 Needs a good nutritious bottom to produce a good plant .
26 The present authors have expanded the range to produce a huge compendium of ill , mad , or bad leaders , some famous , many unknown .
27 These advantages make it possible for the miners to produce a high output , of about 3 tonnes per man per shift .
28 Then , of course , as you so rightly mentioned , there 's the matter of my air-conditioning unit , ’ he continued smoothly , taking a few steps away from her to slide open the door of the large built-in wardrobe to produce a maroon silk dressing-gown , which he gravely handed over to her , before finding a similar garment , this time in striped towelling , for himself .
29 PostScript normally eliminates whatever lies under another object but , by using the overprint option , it can be forced to leave the background intact so that the topmost colour combines with that underneath to produce a different effect .
30 Spot checks or random monitoring visits were felt by some societies to hold out more prospect of deterring and detecting fraud than a routine requirement to produce a six-monthly report — a view supported by FIMBRA .
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