Example sentences of "[adj] [is] [adv] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The estimated difference in the present cratering rate shown in Figure 8.2 is largely the result of the different characteristics of each planet .
2 This is self-consciously an escapist activity , its main value being that it avoids the careful budgeting and penny-counting which shopping itself entails .
3 This is rarely a problem for dating an archaeological site where fragments of broken pottery tend to abound , and it is usual to date several sherds from the same context to provide an average age and better precision .
4 But this is rarely the case .
5 It assumes that an easy consensus can be achieved about the nature of the problem and its resolution , when this is rarely the case .
6 This is rarely the case with the reviews published in Early music or Gramophone , some of whose reviewers have served as musicological advisers for prominent recording projects both in Europe and in England .
7 And that 's why this is traditionally the area where British bikers have broken into the world of continental racing .
8 This is either a trap , Ace thought , or else the Doctor 's found a way to let us in .
9 In practice this is either a letter or a statement of value on HM Land Registry Form A4. ( e ) Insurance Insurance of the property should be placed in the name of the wife alone , the husband 's name being deleted from the policy .
10 Shareholders , banks and so on do not necessarily tightly constrain managers essentially because they lack enough information to do so , and this is either a result of some problem in the market for information ( e.
11 This is particularly a problem in chronic disease .
12 This is particularly a problem in the rural areas , and it 's particularly in the rural areas where this happens .
13 One difficulty is the amount of imputation as described above ; this is particularly a problem for the study of inner city areas and such topics as social deprivation , where the information is likely to be more conjectural .
14 This is particularly the case with Mrs Thatcher .
15 This is particularly the case in less developed countries and in the rural or other underserved areas of more developed countries .
16 This is particularly the case in relation to social and familial factors considered , and the members of the individual 's social network interviewed , as part of the assessment process .
17 This is particularly the case when as here , they are preserved in dark shales , the white calcite of the animal 's skeleton standing out against the background .
18 This is particularly the case in applying discipline to adolescents .
19 This is particularly the case with general principles such as making desirable behaviour worthwhile , setting limits and having clearly defined but fair rules of conduct .
20 This is particularly the case with victims of sexual offences .
21 This is particularly the case where freedom to protest in public places is concerned .
22 This is particularly the case for reasoning , where the group of deaf people performs much less well than hearing groups .
23 This is particularly the case against tough opponents such as Orcs .
24 This is particularly the case in relation to juveniles , since there is a heavy reliance on family background characteristics as indicators of treatment need , which themselves are likely to be class-related ( see Roshier and Teff , 1980 , pp. 140–1 ) .
25 For an international business like ICI this is particularly the case .
26 This is particularly the case in the worlds of politics , sport and entertainment .
27 This is particularly the case when a child has already developed guilt feelings around its own sexuality or sexual matters in general , or where the sexual atmosphere in family or community is repressive or easily shocked .
28 This is particularly the case when critical attention is being focused on details of spoken language which were only ever intended by the speaker as ephemeral parts , relatively unimportant , of the working-out of what he wanted to say .
29 In this connection , Gunn ( 1982 ) reports that for ( a ) also the range in Andersonstown is reduced to variation between [ ae ] and [ a ] ( the latter sometimes slightly retracted ) , but he adds that this is particularly the case for young speakers ; older people frequently retain the vernacular rules of the inner city .
30 You 're waiting and you 're thinking Er and this is particularly the case with a large goods vehicle , you 'll be sitting waiting to go and there 's a lovely gap and you think Can I ?
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