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

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1 More attention , therefore , has been paid to the process by which rank-and-file intelligenty were recruited into the underground ; the interaction between their ideological development and the popular pressure for change welling up from below ; the social composition and structure of the revolutionary organizations they created ; and the impact which those organizations had upon the masses they sought to represent .
2 These arguments then lead us to support the third of the options for change set out in the 1992 Green Paper .
3 Polish nationalism , as Rosa Luxemburg pointed out to Lenin on several occasions , was unusual in that it was not primarily a bourgeois phenomenon , but rather a substitute for ideology taken over from the szlachta by the Polish peasantry as they and the lower ranks of the gentry coalesced to form an industrial working class and a commercial bourgeoisie.14 An important component of Polish political life , and part of the damage wrought by partition , was the continuing failure to produce an ideology that went beyond the purely national to link the aspiration to exist as an independent nation with either capitalist organisation or a socialist vision of society .
4 His extraordinary conceit and capacity for intrigue spilled over into a genuine mental instability and in 1869 he was removed from Rome to a lunatic asylum in a convent at Passy , a suburb of Paris .
5 Surveys of dolphin tissues for mercury carried out in 1978 by Japanese scientists showed very high levels of mercury in local dolphins .
6 More than a year ago , the Barnes board had failed in a bid for permission to sell up to fifteen works from the legendary collection of early modern materpieces in order to fund building repairs .
7 It finally erupted when Mozart asked for permission to stay on for a few days in Vienna to collect some outstanding fees .
8 And even then er you had to ask for permission to stay out till ten .
9 So men from the IRA mixed with British squaddies , and through necessity got on with each other .
10 This demand for money arises out of consumers ' desires to provide for unexpected , and therefore unplanned , expenditures .
11 Although in that same table value for money stands out as the biggest area of dissatisfaction , only a minority of 16 per cent rated it negatively .
12 This book is mainly about research carried out in London — home of Britain 's largest Caribbean community , though not necessarily typical of all the Caribbean communities in Britain .
13 MAKING objects such as gear wheels out of compressed , powdered metal rather than cut or molten metal saves both energy and materials .
14 But Labour 's John Smith asked what had happened to Mrs Thatcher 's conditions for entry set out in Madrid .
15 Apart from the 4-SUBS , traffic levels meant there was little chance for stock to fall out of the bottom of the cascade .
16 ‘ If I did wait for Garry to come back into the fold , what would you be doing ? ’
17 In other cases , however , the court has relied more on the procedure for review laid down in the lease .
18 They thought it normal for tea to come out of the fridge or the oven in a tinfoil box with a peel-back lid , although they did remember for weeks afterwards Lucy 's occasional cordon-bleu phases , when the house had been filled with heart-warming smells , and different kinds of food had appeared out of saucepans on top of the oven , and other dishes inside it .
19 Wilkes became involved with commissioning and editing the guide through research carried out in 1989–90 .
20 London Electricity dipped 1p to 421p after half-time profits up from £14.5m to £17.3m .
21 Evening after evening passed by without Annie the postmistress finding a letter for him in the grey bag the mail van brought in .
22 Morel 's attack on ‘ secret diplomacy ’ was to have immense influence after war broke out in 1914 .
23 The full implications of this convergence between state socialism and nationalism only became apparent after war broke out in 1914 .
24 Soon after war broke out in 1914 he was asked to join ID 25 , the department of naval intelligence known as Room 40 , as a cryptographer .
25 Once again , city centre premises would be boarded up , as business after business moved out of centres , driven away by runaway rates bills .
26 I would run there , tiptoe across the green tiles and after measurement sprint back to the changing room to put on my gym shoes .
27 A cry for help went out to Kings and Princes of the West , and Richard was one of the first to respond , receiving in November 1187 the piece of material cut into the shape of a cross which was the badge of all crusaders .
28 He would clearly hate to be patronized ; he would smell patronage in any apology , in any request for help made out of desire to soothe sore feelings .
29 He had n't expected a trip down to his daughter 's for lunch to end up in the middle of Exmoor .
30 The number of Poles officially looking for work shot up from 9,600 in December to 220,000 last month .
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