Example sentences of "[conj] [conj] [adv] [adj] in " in BNC.

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1 However the decline in the extra-area balance since 1982 has been so great , that although still positive in 1987 , it has been insufficient to prevent the overall balance of trade in manufactured goods from moving into deficit .
2 Mr Parkinson said There would be ‘ huge difficulties ’ in tracking down those who failed to pay : for their journeys , estiamting that if only one in ten 10 motorists 10 per cent refused to pay their bill , the Government would need to collect 63 million times a year.be seeking payment for 63 million journeys a year .
3 For instance , interactionists point to the evidence in the Kinsey report on sexual behaviour that over one-third of male adults have had a homosexual experience to the point of orgasm , and that only one in twenty goes on to adopt a continuing homosexual role .
4 Now , that 's , that 's what you should be doing each time with these With that in and and that much in sort of
5 … there is some practical convergence between ( i ) the anthropological and sociological senses of culture as a distinct ‘ whole way of life ’ , within which , now , a distinctive ‘ signifying system ’ is seen not only as essential but as essentially involved in all forms of social activity , and ( ii ) the more specialized if also more common sense of culture as ‘ artistic and intellectual activities ’ , though these , because of the emphasis on a general signifying system , are now much more broadly defined , to include not only the traditional arts and forms of intellectual production but also all the ‘ signifying practices ’ — from language through the arts and philosophy to journalism , fashion and advertising — which now constitute this complex and necessarily extended field .
6 Thus there is some practical convergence between ( i ) the anthropological and sociological senses of culture as a distinct ‘ whole way of life ’ , within which , now , a distinctive ‘ signifying system ’ is seen not only as essential but as essentially involved in all forms of social activity , and ( ii ) the more specialized if also more common sense of culture as ‘ artistic and intellectual activities ’ , though these , because of the emphasis on a general signifying system , are now much more broadly defined , to include not only the traditional arts and forms of intellectual production but also all the ‘ signifying practices ’ — from language through the arts and philosophy to journalism , fashion and advertising — which now constitute this complex and necessarily extended field .
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