Example sentences of "[noun] [pron] [adj] the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Henry Maudsley in the 1860s , for example , developed the notion that masturbatory insanity was characterised by intense self-regard and conceit , extreme perversion of feeling and corresponding deranging of thought , and later by failure of intelligence , nocturnal hallucinations , and suicidal and homicidal propensities , all characteristics which doomed the boy to social disaster .
2 Perhaps it was Veronica who spring-cleaned the flat ?
3 Researchers and observers have repeatedly suggested that , on the whole , it is in these variables rather than in the break itself that the seeds of disturbance in the child lie .
4 The highlight is a parade through part of the EuroDisney resort which all the cars will take part in .
5 It was characteristic that he stuck into his scrapbook not only the programme of that performance and the rave review from Dance News , but also such memorabilia as publicity photographs and sketches about the clothes and accessories which all the women in the company were given as ambassadors of British fashion , and , significantly , the handsome illustrated brochure of Balanchine 's School of American Ballet .
6 And this is the architecture which all the products are based on .
7 Furthermore , most people under hypnosis do not lose their moral conscience , and their ego ideal retains some critical functions which both the person in love may not retain and which people in crowds may also lose .
8 Then with Tab 's help he nailed-down the lid , reciting the prayers for the dead , and entered her name amongst other deceased of the parish to be remembered at the weekly Requiem Mass .
9 So these people that had little private shops in them days did well because when the people came to the lodges it all the commodities were bought to as well as them .
10 Consider whether a very bold , outrageous , or dramatic look would be too overwhelming in a dining room which all the family are going to want to use at different times .
11 ‘ Well , there was a wedding all right , but it was Matthew who married the girl . ’
12 Swayne : ‘ Well , there was a wedding all right but it was Matthew who married the girl . ’
13 They 're students at the Corsham School in Wiltshire who fought-off the competition to win the chance to play Blockbusters .
14 oche I all the time
15 Their impression was fully shared by the experienced meteorite processors who unwrapped the stone in Houston ( Figure 6 ) .
16 And if the Oxford Student does face a court battle … the Cherwell says it 'll back it all the way .
17 Thge article is pretty silly , but having said that , if it is sued , I 'd back it all the way .
18 Joe me all the time .
19 These are passed through the toiler area which all the mole rats share .
20 it were that nice well I tale it all the veggies were your own produce ?
21 They were mementoes of a journey which all the team will remember for the rest of their lives .
22 Otherwise they might pressure me all the time .
23 And puissant kings which all the world warray 'd
24 6.7 The thing which all the adjectives of the sort found in ( 33 ) have in common is that on the intensional level they qualify the relation between the entity identified by the noun phrase in which they appear and the description supported by the words making up the remainder of that phrase .
25 The lifeguard and a distraught woman bent over him , while her toddler stood forlorn and frightened , weeping loudly without understanding what all the fuss was about .
26 Colin Vickerman , secretary of the Joint Matriculation Board , said : ‘ It is a continuing problem which all the boards are having to keep a fairly close watch on .
27 In the thirteenth century they got rid of old restrictions which fettered the freedom of alienation in the interest of lords or heirs .
28 ‘ Leave her alone , ’ the queen-dowager ordered her daughters who had no idea what all the fuss was about .
29 I had seen Cabinets which all the time seemed to be dealing with the day-to-day problems and there was never a real opportunity to deal with strategy , either from the point of view of the Government or the country .
30 It 's either a six-foot high with sharp edges f fridge freezer or a cooker which all the back 's got grease on and is sliding out of our hands as we carry it .
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