Example sentences of "[conj] [pron] [vb base] in [adj] " in BNC.

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1 This weakens the analysis and suggests inappropriate and possibly divisive policies which ignore discriminations and disadvantages common to white and black students , or which impinge in varying ways upon boys and girls .
2 But they are for ever moving and , where they meet in head-on collision , in what is known as a subduction zone , they produce one of the great geological dramas of the planet .
3 I prefer artwork , although I specialise in fine china and porcelain .
4 While I would insist on the centrality of Noel Coward 's sexuality to the patterns of meanings that I see in Brief Encounter , I would not wish for one second to hold him up as any kind of gay martyr .
5 I should be just as happy to take the advice that I read in National Westminster Bank 's quarterly review , for instance .
6 Tradition required not only that she rot in constricted shade with the disintegrating corpse of her husband , but that she also eat a special diet for the entire period , which excluded any rice at all .
7 Erm , an another advantage of doing that is , it ensures that you do in other things , which is design a system .
8 It has all of the things that you find in other packages — reshaping tools , rotation , reflection , resizing etc. but it also has operations that will combine objects .
9 Become really involved , so that you experience in full the profound emotional depths of colour .
10 In terms of sound it hardly matters , because once you plug in live , the real sound is brought out in the house — you go both direct and to the amp ( racked Gallien-Krueger and Ampeg SVT heads through Hartke cabs in Gene 's case ) .
11 Will he give an undertaking that he will make administrative arrangements that will equally well put into effect the entitlements that we seek in new clause 10 ?
12 Thus , ME language states , being so variable , should in principle be suited to the same kind of analysis that we use in present-day social dialectology , and by using variationist methods we should be able to explore at least some of the constraints on variation that might have existed in ME .
13 We all have a huge wardrobe of actions that we use in different situations .
14 There are hundreds and hundreds of words that we use in everyday language to describe them .
15 They 're going to work in leisure industries , in caring services , in education , all those things that go with what we think as a good life , and indeed , coming back to the third world , that 's the very kind of thing that we need in African villages and India — agriculturalists , erm teachers , health workers and so on .
16 Sieving of this order of simplicity is not , on its own , enough to account for the massive amounts of nonrandom order that we see in living things .
17 The kind of non-randomness that we see in living systems , on the other hand , is equivalent to a gigantic combination lock with an almost uncountable number of dials .
18 For example , we already know the physical laws that govern everything that we experience in everyday life .
19 a little bit , but not a great deal those gears most of the time as well the ones that we cruise in top gear I do n't think that 's really for me
20 There is also a Darwinian reason that we believe in free will : A society in which the individual feels responsible for his or her actions is more likely to work together and survive to spread its values .
21 At the levels er that we find in diagnostic radiology , the individual levels of risk are very very low .
22 They should look at the Europe that will exist in five or 10 years ' time , at a Community with 18 or 20 members and perhaps even more , and at the interests that we have in common — security , defence , foreign policy , the environment , prosperity and peace in the world .
23 in the way that we have in previous years and management teams have n't grown in that sense , but the responsibilities of management have been increased .
24 It is the truth which is being demonstrated in 1975 in Vietnam , in Britain , — and it is the real choice that we face in Southern Africa .
25 Often I reflect that we live in crazy times , Mikhail , under crazy circumstances . ’
26 Both sources have been neglected by researchers , although they survive in large numbers , and contain very valuable evidence bearing on the British Industrial Revolution , its causes , and its effects on the standard of living .
27 The Foundation 's funds , although they arise in modest sums from events such as the concerts and total not much more than £300,000 , have a disproportionate effect in use .
28 And the reason that rents in Cambridge are higher than in those in surrounding areas , or the eight that the councillor is talking about is because the rent levels which er the government require us to raise to are historically based on right to buy values and as he knows as well as I do , house prices in Cambridge have been relatively consistently higher than they have in surrounding areas .
29 But we know that people disagree to some extent about the right principles of behaviour , so we distinguish that requirement from the different ( and weaker ) requirement that they act in important matters with integrity , that is , according to convictions that inform and shape their lives as a whole , rather than capriciously or whimsically .
30 Mind you it was only their wages are only comparable to say some wages that they get in nuclear power station .
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