Example sentences of "[adv] [adj] [adv] [conj] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 This is erm Nick and I said that erm it 's rather confusing here because on the one hand he represents the American dream boy because he 's young , he 's beautiful , he 's got his future ahead of him .
2 If that is so , presumably costs to industry will be that much lower here than in the rest of Europe , so there will not be equal competition with enterprises in the other 11 nations of the European Community .
3 She might have been any age between thirty and sixty and Wexford set the lower limit so low only because of her young children .
4 It is becoming less popular now because of the lack of support it gives to the lower back , although it does give more buoyancy than other types .
5 The tax on businesses is much lighter here than in France , and it is also lower than in Germany .
6 The Firth was much broader here than at Dalmeny and , if it had not been a clear day , Corbett could have almost believed they were out on the open sea .
7 Much greener here than at home , is n't it , ’ said Angalo .
8 My main concern is , that I think that over the years , as people have lived longer and as they became retired , we 've tended to neglect them , not so much financially and in terms of their conditions , though I think there 's always arguments about that ; I think we 've actually neglected their role in the community .
9 The problem was that I think David was moving so much away and into this trip of actually doing music with a message — of actually delivering something on stage which meant something to other people of his age .
10 Dada accepted all the changes at Deer Forest , not so much apathetically as with genuine indifference .
11 Not so much now because of ill health but she used to .
12 While the Panel does not fall squarely within this category of body , its activities are considered by the courts to be sufficiently similar so as to be subject to judicial review .
13 We are much clearer now than at the beginning about how to approach science in a more girl friendly way ( see Smail , 1983 , 1984 ) , and the clarity is due in part to the way we have worked with teachers .
14 Now , although the idea that whenever we see that someone is in pain we make an inference from behaviour to feeling is about as mythical as the idea that at some time in the past we made a Social Contract , the ‘ argument from analogy ’ line of reasoning seems much less implausible here than in the ‘ Afternoon on the Sun ’ case .
15 Somewhat forbidding socially because of shyness , Dorothea had an absolute integrity which made her stand up for what she believed should be done .
16 Even so , I find the Christchurch trebles less robust here than in the choir 's previous Byrd discs , tending to remain within a limited dynamic range , even in the more laudatory Latin Motets .
17 Why then , people wonder , is inflation so much higher here than in our main competitor countries ?
18 The revenue is so desperate now because of this change in banks and building societies have left people not knowing what the situation is , and er there are millions , I 'm , I 'm not exaggerating there are twelve million , over two million pounds is being spent by the revenue on a new tax-back advert , sorry I did exaggerate , the idea is to remind about ten million people on all , on low income , that they could claim back tax which has been deducted from taxed savings .
19 This is a small town of some character , a historic strong point standing up above the Gave , in which there are competitions in summer to catch the surviving salmon , no longer so abundant here as in the good medieval days .
20 The decline of marriage , increasing cohabitation and extra-marital childbearing and the emergence of new family structures arising from greater divorce , remarriage and lone parenthood has meant that the traditional image of the family , of a married couple with dependent children , is less common today than in the past .
21 These general principles have long lain at the heart of the social purpose approach : and they are no less relevant today than in the 1900s .
22 Taking the last first , there are three villages which are so close together that with any allowance for coalescence , even the one kilometre which I believe was taken in the original look at this problem by the County Council , there would be no possibility of fitting in a settlement er of the size proposed .
23 Her rats-tail hair did n't seem so bad suddenly and in the firelight she was quite pretty .
24 That entitlement is already feebler here than in many countries .
25 The father of modern psychology , Sigmund Freud believed ‘ … psychiatry is not possible near or above the age of 50 ; the elasticity of the mental processes on which the treatment depends is as a rule lacking — old people are not educable . ’
26 Bill Muggeridge , he noted with regret , had been free for the first hour , when Pumfrey and Fenniway had been busy with the Fromes , but was not free again until after lunch .
27 Such events occur once every 30 years on average in our Galaxy , and a good proportion are not visible optically because of intervening matter .
28 then you know I 'm not sure either whether of course I mean one would hope that erm the institute would have certain requirements about the erm practical period that you
29 ‘ I had my only run of the day at approximately 11 am and after setting the hooks I had a slow , dogged fight for about five minutes before netting the fish at the second attempt , ’ said Dave .
30 As it is occasionally covered by the sea this sand is not compact so that at times we could walk fairly comfortably , but at other times we sank in unexpectedly , which broke up our rhythm and made us tired and frustrated .
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