Example sentences of "[be] enough [noun sg] [verb] the " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 a different set of policies but but as of forty seven the strategy is we need to mobilize the masses quickly behind us now , there must be enough land to give the er peasants enough .
2 It decided it could squeeze in a fifth , but there is no room for a sixth channel and by the time you add up the extra transmission channels needed for relaying the signal onwards , there will not be enough spectrum to allow the fifth channel to cover the whole country .
3 On the other hand , if the industrial use generates low profits , there may not be enough money to maintain the building .
4 He took the envelope from Sandison who also handed over what he believed to be enough money to cover the postage .
5 The frame will extend the bag almost fully but without overstretching it , and there will be enough slackness to allow the bag to be folded out over the top of the frame .
6 The report concluded that , with a further increase in mechanization , there should still be enough labour to meet the needs of the industry by 1980 , but that there was little room to manoeuvre and the longer-term situation was unclear .
7 There had never been enough money to dress the child properly and even if there had been they did n't have the style or the know-how .
8 There is enough money to cover the cremation and any other expenses .
9 The celebrations may last well into a week , as long as there is enough whisky to keep the party spirit afloat , with people from neighbouring glens calling by to offer their congratulations and share a wee dram .
10 This is enough information to identify the efficient benchmark project size as OE in Fig. 11–12 , where the difference between TB e and TC e is maximized .
11 Always make sure that there is enough room to open the doors fully , and check that your purchase will actually pass through the doors en route to its eventual site — your refrigeration supplier should take care of this for you .
12 An article in the Jewish Chronicle last year , in which Wesker wrote that all he wanted was enough money to give the play a chance to be seen in London led to a benefactor , who wishes to remain anonymous , phoning him up and offering to underwrite the venture to the tune of £13,500 .
13 This is the trouble with compromises ; there was enough dialogue to string the musical numbers together , and the abridgement guarded against tedium , but the result is neither one thing nor the other .
14 Confident that there was enough evidence to support the move , Branson now appointed himself to the board as an ‘ A ’ director , giving the Virgin Group a three to two majority over Fields .
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