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

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1 That led in turn to the expectation ( already raised by Mr Clinton 's past political record ) that he would be pro-business and fiscally conservative .
2 that knelt in yellow to the west , or spoke
3 This amounted in effect to a grant of £1,000 a year , the annual amount of the lease which was now extinguished .
4 This led in turn to the most highly successful venture in buying and selling of business aircraft the aviation industry had seen .
5 This led in turn to larger and higher buildings , extended window and door space and a complexity of design for exterior and interior undreamed of in Romanesque architecture .
6 This led in turn to the creation of the Standing Committee on Employment , composed of representatives of the Commission , Council , employers and trade unions .
7 This applied in relation to all the foundation subjects in England , but only the core subjects in Wales .
8 This stands in contrast to most consumer specialised magazine titles which have seen a fall in sales .
9 Recognising that this stands in contradiction to the statements contained in the terms and conditions of engagement which they offer their casual workers , some organisations seek to make it clear that they are no more than " collecting agents for the revenue " .
10 Where data do exist on support between kin across households , this tends in effect to be limited to documenting the networks through which support flowed and the kind of support which was given , and can give very little direct evidence about the underlying structure of social relations which supported these exchanges .
11 This leads in turn to the third and deepest level of the motif , the mythical aspect .
12 This leads in turn to what is perhaps the fundamental difficulty in Hegel 's entire pattern of thought .
13 This reduces in practice to deciding how to specify the destination of a jump instruction , when this destination may be any part-word or syllable .
14 This seems in principle to be an equally available justification as regards the mentally unfit , even though it may well be deplored .
15 In part this means in relation to other members of society as conditioned by the distribution of income and the operation of political power .
16 Tizard , for example , mentions the need to support the natural parents to enable them to care adequately ; Kellmer Pringle has advocated payment for mothers who stay at home to care ; and a further interviewee who may be identified with the ‘ society-as-parent ’ view had this to say in answer to the argument that the 1975 Act put already powerless parents in an even more powerless position :
17 Skuas and jaegers — predatory gull-like birds — winter at sea but feed almost entirely ashore on insects and small mammals during the breeding season ; phalaropes , divers and several species of ducks similarly switch from marine foraging in winter to feeding and breeding on the tundra wetlands in summer .
18 3.3.1.2 remove or tamper with the Trade Marks or other means of attribution or identification used on or in relation to the Licensed Products 3.3.1.3 use the Trade Marks in any way which might prejudice their distinctiveness or validity or the goodwill of therein 3.3.1.4 use in relation to the Products any Trade Marks other than the Trade Marks and the trade marks of and MacEnglish as set out in Schedule 2 B or used by in the Territory any Trade Marks or Trade Names so resembling the Trade Marks or Trade Names of as to be likely to cause confusion or deception .
19 Anyone wanting to join has to apply and needs a two-thirds vote in favour to be allowed in , ’ says Mr Smythe , who lives at Green Bank , Heighington , near Darlington .
20 It is this , and not any dispute about the existence of variable norms , that leads in practice to a number of differences in our treatment of ‘ speech community ’ and to some differences in our model of linguistic change .
21 Whatever may be done to turn CD-ROM into a vehicle for multimedia , it is never likely to appeal in volume to the consumer market .
22 Retailing is likely to suffer in relation to commercial and industrial property .
23 Adjustment can be conducted with the aid of deionised water , or rainwater ( soft mixed in proportion to tap water ( generally hard .
24 However , we have seen that this approach can be criticized on the grounds that the discourse structure of the interview is still present and that attempts to obscure the nature of the speech event are likely to lead in practice to confusion and difficulty .
25 However , one need not be overly cynical to realise that having a good idea of what masses of people are likely to do in response to certain policies gives a competitive advantage to politicians and businessmen alike .
26 Motives here have varied , and included a changing perception of the needs of employers , course costs which were hard to justify in comparison to other areas of the Polytechnic and the need for degree designation in order to attract mandatory student grants .
27 But a misinterpreted text , an inappropriate prayer , a hurried wedding ceremony ; are these likely to result in damage to the soul ?
28 A manufacturer of products , which he sells in such a form as to show that he intends them –o reach the ultimate consumer in the form in which they left him , with no reasonable possibility of intermediate examination , and with the knowledge that the absence of reasonable care in the preparation or putting up of the products is likely to result in injury to the consumer 's life or property , owes a duty to the consumer to take reasonable care .
29 Thus the more nearly perfect a market is , the stronger is the tendency for the same price to be paid for the same thing at the same time in all parts of the market : but of course if the market is large , allowance must be made for the expense of delivering the goods to different purchasers ; each of whom must be supposed to pay in addition to the market price a special charge on account of delivery .
30 These include in addition to the above : ( a ) a covenant by the tenant to keep the premises in repair ; ( b ) an implied covenant giving a right of re-entry to the landlord where there is non-payment of rent , and ( c ) an undertaking by the tenant to pay rent .
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