Example sentences of "[verb] [verb] [art] [noun] in " in BNC.
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1 | He asked to see the images in the church , of which there was so much talk . |
2 | What interests her , apparently , is not the remark itself , but ‘ the degree to which the piece of recall ’ — her piece of recall , presumably — ‘ failed to affect the novel in any way ’ . |
3 | The fragmented narrative cultivated by Vargas Llosa , for example , is intended to replicate the way in which we experience real life , in that events and information are presented to us in a disjointed fashion and it is only when we have lived through the reading experience that we are able to piece it all together with the benefit of hindsight . |
4 | They did not want to lose an oar in the wild water . |
5 | She did n't want to see the hurt in his eyes , in case it made her soften and forgive him . |
6 | That 's one of the reasons why they do n't like doing this kind of thing that the did this morning , because they do n't want to affect the project in any way , and I think the management takes advantage of that . |
7 | I greeted the first man to approach the car in my broken French and to my surprise , he asked if I would prefer to continue the conversation in English . |
8 | Like all juvenile troupes they had to go to court every Monday in a new town to obtain a licence to work . |
9 | In order to continue to monitor the developments in the English vocabulary from day to day and from year to year , it is essential for the Dictionary Department to continue to collect such quotations . |
10 | Police investigating Katie 's death will also want to interview the suspect in London . |
11 | The tendency for prescriptive ideologies to inhibit and distort responses in situations where informants are conscious of a competing set of standard norms became evident when Labov pressed his questions with people who had been heard using the construction in conversation . |
12 | Russia , in helping to restore the museums in other former republics after the war , gave them works both from its own museum collections and from war booty . |
13 | Below the photic zone oxygen is consumed by biological activity so immediat from immediately below the photic zone you tend to see a decrease in oxygen with depth reaching a minima somewhere between five hundred and a thousand metres depth |
14 | In fact , those who support the introduction of a Bill of Rights tend to see the state in essentially " negative " terms : it is regarded as the only real threat to individual freedom and liberty ( apart from that posed by the collective activity of trade unions ) because freedom itself is defined negatively as simply involving an absence of public and legal restraint on individual action . |
15 | President Reagan failed to support an effort in Congress to provide a five-year , $1000 million package of loans and other measures to tempt the mining firms into action . |
16 | The jury was told that Paul admitted using the bat in a game of baseball in Battersea Park just a few days after the killing . |
17 | Scientific language is theory-laden : in using it , one is taught to see the world in a particular way . |
18 | America , Canada , Britain and Sweden are all now expected to see a fall in economic output this year ; America 's GNP is forecast to shrink by 0.4% . |
19 | In particular , a database user may want to search a file in a number of ways , according to a particular application . |
20 | As a mode of explanation it involves bringing the outside in , and linking the particular to the general . |
21 | ‘ This is one more example of our ability and willingness to continue to support the UN in the cause of peace . ’ |
22 | In doing so , he failed to see a pothole in the driveway , fell off and was injured . |
23 | It was quite dark when Breeze let herself into the house , and for a second she was dazzled by the electric light , and failed to see the suitcases in the hall . |
24 | Head full of academic knowledge but nothing else — and before anybody could bat an eyelid , he applied to sit an exam in London , and the next thing he was in the Metropolitan Police . |
25 | ‘ Charles has at times given the impression that he would prefer to renounce the throne in favour of his son . |
26 | Having some 1979 data on custody practices and prisoner interviews he sought to replicate the study in 1986/7 to assess the influence of the legislation on police practice . |
27 | They sat in the cold front room , not daring to light a fire in the strange house . |
28 | I had already run three miles , and my boots were too heavy for sprinting — besides I did not want to catch the gang in front . |
29 | ‘ Yes , London is undoubtedly the best place to go to find a job in the fashion industry . ’ |
30 | After a long campaign to set the record straight , including an investigation by a House of Lords committee , Salter was eventually vindicated in 1990 when the Department of Energy agreed to adjust the figures in its official literature . |