Example sentences of "[verb] its [noun pl] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 In the second half of 1934 and in 1935 the movement all but collapsed as a national force , and to revive its fortunes the fascist political programme was de-emphasized and instead more attention was paid to fomenting local and regional grievances in populist campaigns .
2 Unless Labour develops its policies the next election will be a battle between two parties with virtually identical economic policies .
3 Stirling has already established an undoubted reputation for innovative teaching and offers its students an excellent learning environment .
4 The Hotel Obermühle also offers its guests an indoor swimming-pool , solarium , bar and the Mühlenstube restaurant which serves wonderful local specialities as part of our half-board arrangement .
5 It has given its owners a greater degree of mobility than they hitherto possessed but the social and environmental cost has been considerable .
6 The English climate , having given its clients a long series of warm sunny days , had decided that this must be paid for .
7 It flaps its wings a few times to lift itself off the ground , then simply rises up , using whatever thermals and air currents it comes across .
8 The catering department at the Dome Leisure Centre , Doncaster , refitted its kitchens a few years ago and , with its suppliers ' advice , chose equipment which anticipated the five degree temperature requirements .
9 Paris could hardly believe its ears a few days later when Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau entered the Salle Pleyel , exactly 40 years after his Parisian début , to sing Die Schöne Müllerin with ( once past the buffeted consonants and fatal eruptions of ‘ Das Wandern ’ ) a mezza voce intact , and a sensitive response to the warmhearted suggesting from the piano of Christoph Eschenbach , that one could hardly believe possible ( and more astounding still in that immense hall ! ) .
10 Association director Richard Insoll warned : ‘ The Wine and Spirit Association will be reviewing this and other instances of apparent abuse of authority by EHOs in order to give its members the best advice .
11 In this issue you can read about Auvers-sur-l'Oise where many of the Impressionists lived and painted , which has decided to give its tourists the hyperreal experience of walking through ‘ Dejeuner sur l'herbe ’ and travelling in the padded compartments of a nineteenth-century train with Monet landscapes outside .
12 This has traumatised a company that traditionally gave its employees an implicit job-for-life promise .
13 People are encouraged to set themselves high standards in order for Whitbread , in turn , to offer its customers a high standard of service .
14 As a monthly , the magazine can not offer its readers the overnight scores , nor preview the week 's to matches .
15 For example , in order for Ukraine to get hold of Scythian gold , the republic not only has to declare its citizens the direct descendents of the Scythians , but also to prove that the remarkable Scythian objects at present held in the Hermitage were made by natives and not by itinerant ancient Greek craftsmen .
16 Although development of scheduled air services from Eindhoven has reduced the need for Philair to transport relatively large numbers of employees on short sectors , it is still able to achieve its objectives by saving time , giving a quality service , providing a flexibility of movement , and offering its customers a personal service not easily achieved on public transport .
17 Accordingly we can ask its supporters the same question we addressed to our friends from Copenhagen .
18 A feeling of employment insecurity might be thought to stem from the agency 's lack of obligation to provide assignments on a continuous basis , and thus its inability to guarantee its workers a regular income .
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