Example sentences of "[conj] [adv] [verb] [prep] new " in BNC.

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1 For example in using traditional publishing as a model for electronic publishing , we may fail to encompass innovation , or to address issues and products that only emerge with new technology ( e.g. access to information , data protection , expert systems ) .
2 These principles were readily accepted and widely implemented in new developments from the 1960s onwards .
3 Competitive advantage can be gained from exploiting information at the strategic level so as to increase business efficiency or to highlight areas in the organisation which are particularly strong or weak , and thus lead to new business strategies .
4 Anchor worm ( Lernaea ) is similar , in that it is a crustacean parasite and usually introduced with new ( especially recently imported ) Koi .
5 It is often a good thing to be somewhat anarchic , never rigid in your opinions , and always open to new ideas if you want to be a planner .
6 Cracks in rendering should be raked out , cut back to sound material if necessary and then filled with new mortar .
7 Uses a ‘ sponge and dough ’ process ; part of the dough is left for 24 hours and then added to new dough .
8 He then replaced it with beautifully quartered burr black walnut veneers and then routed in new lippings to frame the burrs .
9 She has to decide , as she goes , how and when to weave in new strands and drop old ones , still keeping the continuity of design .
10 Both sites were kept going until the early 1980s , when the latter was closed and subsequently covered by new housing in late 1988 .
11 Until the end of the nineteenth century , or even later , most foreign offices adapted their internal structures , for so many generations designed to meet demands which were entirely European , only slowly and reluctantly to cope with new problems which increasingly embraced the entire world .
12 The middlemen who organized supplies of these crops for European traders were not only accumulators of capital but also invested in new opportunities , such as that created by the demand for cocoa in the 1890s .
13 Side by side with the increasing popularity of monetary theories of the cycle , the late 1970s witnessed the emergence of alternative theories of the business cycle which , though firmly rooted in new classical macroeconomics , attributed the causes of the business cycle to real as opposed to monetary phenomena .
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