Example sentences of "[adj] [verb] [adv prt] [noun sg] of " in BNC.

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1 Erm and so far well I 'm certainly willing to confess that I took these away full of good intentions and have have so far carried around this torn up copy of the Greater London Green Party for months .
2 It is n't in addition to the pension you 're getting , you have to be willing to give up part of your own pension in advance .
3 Outcome has been assessed clinically and by ultrasound scanning in 92 patients with a median follow up period of 14 months ( six to 37 months ) .
4 This sparked off talk of a tunnel leading to Burghley House where a mythical monastery founded in 1158 by William Waterville was supposed to have stood ( this monastery is still cited in the Burghley House guide book ) .
5 One advantage of a card file is that it is very easy to pick up handful of cards and flip through them in odd five minutes in order to memorise some new words .
6 The overall 1991 start up award of £1000 and the Belfast Telegraph prize of £2000 worth of advertising .
7 Sun and ICL say they are there to ‘ endorse ’ HyperSparc , though neither rules out use of the part in future system plans .
8 6 Fill out register of honorarium payments ( FIN22 ) .
9 Right well thank you very much for your brevity and we will be able to send out team of experts out to deal with floods after lunch .
10 The mean follow up interval of the remaining 73 ( 25 men ; 48 women ) was 6.1 years ( range 4 to 12 ) .
11 Our study with a mean follow up period of 28.3 months ( range 2–80 ) clearly shows the longterm effectiveness of endoscopic treatment of Dieulafoy 's lesion .
12 En Shao appeared in Liverpool two years ago , shortly before he was due to take up position of principal conductor of the Ulster Orchestra where he is now installed .
13 Although Henry 's desire to have a new wife and greater control over the English church was the primary incentive for the schism , Cromwell and the members of Anne Boleyn 's faction were also keen to bring about reform of the church ( see Chapters 4 and 6 ) .
14 When pressure was eventually put on L.E.A.s in the 1950s to take over employment of the various county organisers whose salaries hitherto had been paid from Carnegie Trust funds , most authorities did so on condition that the organisers ' work should be extended to schools .
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