Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [v-ing] in the " in BNC.
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1 | The borrowings are converted into Sterling when drawn down thereby locking in the exchange rate and the currency borrowings are repaid from the currency receivables . |
2 | Perhaps much learning in the natural sciences , in the medical sciences and in technology is like this . |
3 | The subtle differences have brought a strength and depth of study to the discipline of building surveying and created the sense of identity so palpably missing in the 1960s . |
4 | Situated on Brighton Seafront close to the famous West Pier , the Brighton Hotel offers elegance , luxury and comfort , coupled with the friendly service so often lacking in the larger establishment . |
5 | This down-to-earth good sense has not been sufficiently stressed in the past ; there is a normality , a sanity , a state of psychological health which is so often missing in the more obviously ‘ Romantic ’ of Wordsworth 's contemporaries . |
6 | The 400m medley is one of the most physically demanding in the Olympic programme but Davies refutes any suggestion , that at 29 , she may be too old to cope . |
7 | These monographs are not only binding in the member countries , but also carry the force of law in the British Commonwealth and in former colonies of France , Spain and Belgium . |
8 | In theory it is possible to obtain insurance against warranty liability ( e.g. Directors and officers ) but in practice the insurers are normally so demanding in the kind of confirmations they require and so restrictive as to what they will insure ( eg not taxation ) that this is rarely practicable or worthwhile . |
9 | Price Waterhouse , it seems , was not just investing in the Prudential by dropping the audit fee by 14% . |
10 | It 's a problem which applies to all young photographers apparently , not just operating in the music field . |
11 | Mr referred earlier to the views of the Association for the Disabled on proposals and that is very very important and I think increasingly it will be the committee 's concern to if you like have very s acute listening ears to , to what is needed and what is , what is wanted in the community and organizations like this can be very important in not just lobbying in the crude sense but providing a real medium of communication and I think that that would be helpful . |
12 | Meanwhile still waiting in the wings are the Cameron 's management buy-out team and Sunderland brewers Vaux . |
13 | Though that did not mean that , in his bubble chamber , Akbar was not still writhing in the agony of pseudo-injury — terrible burns and blindness — as he struggled to master such huge referred pain . |
14 | People are not always working in the jobs for which they were trained . |
15 | Best response of the night — not bad going in the face of St Etienne 's new-found libidinous following — and a fitting end to a night that fed off nothing more than the sheer character of the individual bands . |
16 | However , an increase in the real wage is also likely to induce people who are not initially participating in the labour market to enter the market and seek jobs . |
17 | Not then travelling in the comfort of an airliner to attend ceremonies marking an anniversary but actually taking part in the historic attacks against the mighty German battleship Tirpitz . |
18 | Not to do so means that they are not truly working in the best interests of the children . |
19 | It could be that the Pied Piper is never seen , but that all communication with him is by letter or petition — with the teacher writing replies but not actually appearing in the role . |
20 | Far East economies are among the most rapidly growing in the world . |
21 | British goods are once more winning in the toughest markets abroad . |
22 | Our plane was called out again and we 're off now heading in the direction of Singapore . |
23 | When an exporter grants credit terms to the buyer abroad and the buyer ( or his bank if a Letter of Credit is involved ) accepts a Bill of Exchange , the exporter may be able to arrange to have the accepted Bill discounted , once again locking in the exchange rate from the discounting date . |
24 | Millwall have hovered in mid-table and three successive defeats have virtually destroyed any lingering hopes of once again featuring in the end-of-season play-off drama . |
25 | Later , when like a waking nightmare , the business was over and he was once again sitting in the cab , Mr Beecham leant towards him and said , ‘ If you will excuse us we will be returning straight to Newcastle , ’ and paused before adding , ‘ Sir Joseph , ’ which remark drew the young man 's attention to him . |
26 | It was well after midnight and the cold surface of the Thames had only its elemental nature in common with a desert pool , and although she was once again sitting in the shadow of the Sphinx it was on cold , wet stone and not on sunbaked sand . |
27 | All the time he 'd imagined Lee up in the wood , with Caspar most probably sheltering in the hide , but now , as he climbed through the wood in the gulley , he was n't so sure that Lee would be there . |
28 | It is one I often serve before a simple meat dish , beef , lamb or veal , which is probably already cooking in the oven before the vegetable dish goes in . |
29 | She 's probably still living in the same house , still teaching , still struggling with the Marmite and the Spinoza . |
30 | Firstly , a young horse may not have formed a habit of accepting things as they are and automatically always behaving in the same way . |