Example sentences of "[adj] [adv] [to-vb] in [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 However , the party was very careful not to support in principle ministerial contact with the PLO , a stance which clearly angered Weizmann .
2 Rabbits would dash out of their losing darkness , and the village boys would chase them with sticks and yells , careful not to get in front of the two who had the guns .
3 This is easy enough to use in theory and works effectively .
4 They form a rough diamond shape , and are in the same × 12 field , so that they are easy enough to recognize in spite of their dimness .
5 Some deliberate fixed capacitance is incorporated in parallel with R 1 , firstly to make the performance sufficiently independent of connections to the output and , secondly , to render the value of C 2 that satisfies equation ( 8.3 ) large enough to implement in practice , especially when the attenuation is large so that and .
6 The best chance of acclimatization occurs with acquisitions of about 2″ in length , which are small enough to adapt to new foods and large enough to survive in tank conditions .
7 For instance , when a teacher is speaking or demonstrating it is better not to stand in front of windows .
8 In discussing these two processes it will be helpful still to bear in mind the distinction between universal and particular concepts , because it will be suggested that anchoring is a universal process , whilst objectification is a particular one .
9 It is perhaps useful here to bear in mind the distinction often made in the study of pressure groups between ‘ interest ’ groups and ‘ cause ’ groups , though in the tactical struggle for influence each may seek to co-opt the support of the other .
10 In March 1862 the novelist Ivan Turgenev satirized Russia 's revolutionary youth in Fathers and Sons , but the fires that devastated St Petersburg two months later led many to suppose that radicals were tough enough to engage in arson .
11 What I need , thought Grunte , telephoning room service for ‘ a proper English Breakfast ’ and a newspaper ‘ small enough to read in bed ’ , is a bit of nooky .
12 And if she was naïve enough to fall in love with him — so much the better .
13 Section 6(2) contemplates restoration of what was received , or the value of it ; subsection ( 3 ) ( a ) and subsection ( 4 ) ( a ) contemplate restoration of the value surviving ; and subsection ( 3 ) ( b ) and subsection ( 4 ) ( b ) are wide enough to cover in principle compensation in respect of loss of an opportunity to make a profit .
14 5.12.1 Not to commit in relation to the Premises any breach of planning control ( such term to be construed in the way in which it is used in the Planning Acts )
15 Echoing this anxiety over the future of democracy at the end of the First World War , another government inspector wrote of the need to keep working-class youth ‘ in touch with ‘ the forces of civilisation ’ , for it was necessary always to keep in mind that ‘ we are training a whole social class ’ .
16 It is necessary then to consider in turn the war , the effects of coalitionism , and the years between the end of coalition and the party recovery in 1924 .
17 ‘ So , here I am , Uncle Orrin , ’ she had said gaily , ‘ your naughty niece , exiled because she was silly enough to fall in love with a poor man who was only interested in her money .
18 When Father died , he left us both enough to live in comfort for the rest of our lives , regardless of our husbands ’ support .
  Next page