Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] [noun] [prep] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | When the pope nevertheless steadfastly refused to give way , Henry intensified his attack on the church ; in the summer of 1530 he issued a charge of praemunire against fifteen clerics , including the four bishops who had supported Catherine , on the grounds that they had aided Wolsey in the exercise of his legatine authority and thereby given support to papal jurisdiction within his realm . |
2 | This development meets the needs of local practitioners for support in personal education , patient recall , and retinal screening ; flexibly integrates generalist with specialist care ; and , perhaps best of all , puts patients first by sending the prompt directly to them . |
3 | Indeed , hundreds have successfully completed modules over recent years and it is evident that the National Certificate 's flexibility is as viable in prisons as in any other centre . |
4 | The client eventually recovered £1,000 in supplementary benefit additional requirements , backdated to 1976 . |
5 | The Province-wide project employs both quantitative and qualitative methods to collect data and includes a proportion of male respondents within the sample , thereby allowing comparisons of political participation to be drawn on the basis of , among other things , sex and gender . |
6 | As to British Aerospace , will my hon. Friend give a firm assurance that the Government will continue vigorously to support exports of military aircraft — something which is strongly opposed by many Opposition Members ? |
7 | Furthermore , extensive spreads of such seas can as effectively isolate pieces of emergent continent as spreading ocean floor , thereby creating barriers to migration of terrestrial organisms , and should also promote equability of the continental climate . |
8 | It tends rather to co-opt aspects of humanist theory for its own ends , and to employ more traditional theories as well . |
9 | A widely recognized consequence of early marriage or entrance into a conjugal union is the lengthening of the period that women spend as married or sexually active during their childbearing years which , without birth control or infecundity , results in higher completed fertility at age 50 . |
10 | The only tasks where high success rates were obtained were those where the pupil can effectively treat decimals as whole numbers . |
11 | Er the York based company will be a wholly owned subsidiary of limited . |
12 | Businessure is underwritten by GA Bonus plc , a wholly owned subsidiary of General Accident . |
13 | My own bank , Ulster Bank Ltd , a wholly owned subsidiary of National Westminster Bank PLC , operating independently throughout Ireland , is keen to work with those engaged in international trade . |
14 | Its ownership relationships varied from a wholly owned territory to joint ventures to a partnership . |
15 | The important question is whether town and country planning has successfully constrained development in rural areas . |
16 | But , in the language of social anthropology , " kinship " has very little to do with biology ; it refers rather to a widely ramifying pattern of named relationships which link together the individual members of a social system in a network . |
17 | WAITERS dash to and fro replenishing baskets of crusty bread as often as you like — a sure sign of a good French brasserie . |
18 | By arguments of this kind , biological or similar arguments could coherently yield constraints on social goals , personal ideals , possible institutions and so forth . |
19 | Three years after publisher Robert Maxwell sacked twenty one journalists from the Pergamon Press company , it 's been announced tonight that they 're to be paid thousands of pounds in compensation.The deal brings to an end one of the longest runing disputes in British trade union history . |
20 | Moreover , many widely reported accounts of astonishing experiences are elaborations or flat lies . |
21 | This chapter considers two of the more widely reported approaches to budgetary reform that focused on programmes : the planning , programming , budgeting ( PPB ) system , and zero-base budgeting ( ZBB ) . |
22 | It was a distinguished face with the deep-set , widely spaced eyes beneath straight brows , a well-shaped , rather secretive mouth and strong greying hair swept upwards and curled into a chignon . |
23 | However , properly targeted research on young males , particularly those from disadvantaged ethnic groups , which considers both the meaning and duration of unemployment … has yet to be done ’ . |
24 | Whether a system with finitely many basic signals is a system of communication in the strong sense — that is , a linguistic system — depends on whether the characteristic behaviour within which and against which it is interpreted is complex enough to sustain attributions of higher-order beliefs and intentions to the creatures concerned . |
25 | At this late stage , the finishing line in sight , Mr Major 's supporters are hoping that he will reach into his very core for some hitherto hidden source of charismatic energy . |
26 | They have theoretical knowledge and practical experience of language-teaching methods , but they lack knowledge of the methods and materials used to teach their native language as a foreign language in the UK , and have only limited familiarity with British secondary education — the school system , teacher and pupil roles and expectations , curricula , assessment and exams . |
27 | In 1982 BBC1 's ‘ Nationwide ’ covered Gay News ' tenth birthday , but in general the sharp end of factual programming has only given space to gay issues when they impinge on heterosexual concerns . |
28 | So land vertebrates in particular tend to come from relatively few sites , which become exhaustively collected compared with most invertebrate localities . |
29 | Some lords were fortunate enough to gather aids on other occasions ; many lords had great difficulty in gathering aids at all . |
30 | This has the advantage of apparently allowing storage of digested slurries without regeneration of offensive odours . |