Example sentences of "[conj] [vb pp] within [art] [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Most of the detailed factual material learned in the sixth form is forgotten or superseded within a few years .
2 We need a more active approach to the promotion of new knowledge provided by research … to carry out large numbers of research projects and then put them on shelves and in pigeon holes is appallingly wasteful , as is also the vast amount of information available in hundreds of central and local government reports published each year and then forgotten , and never collated or analysed within an overall framework of reference .
3 Expertise is diffuse rather than held within the guided hand of the state authority .
4 So today the needs of the mentally ill and handicapped are seen as demanding a wide range of facilities : homes , centres , clinics and so forth , served by doctors , nurses , teachers , psychologists , psychotherapists , speech therapists and residential care workers , linked by a body of trained social workers and placed within a tolerant , accepting and truly caring community .
5 They were aged 75 years and were seen and treated within the first 4 hours of the onset of symptoms .
6 Grades 2 and 3 indicate patency of the infarct related vessel and were found mostly in these 50 patients seen and treated within the first 4 hours after the onset of symptoms who received the 100 mg rt-PA .
7 It is in this area that our communications facilities will require to be strengthened and developed within the next five years .
8 In 1974 the structure changed and they were taken from local authorities and amalgamated within the new health authorities — first area , and then later ( 1982 ) district , health authorities .
9 Although this rule could be represented and applied within a symbolic system , it is reasonable to suggest that it has been ‘ learnt ’ by the evolutionary process and is embodied in the flies ' neurophysiology .
10 Such methods were increasingly copied and applied within the official investigations of the state itself , and became an important element in its maintenance and extension .
11 Interest-group activity could just about be tolerated as long as it was moderate and operated within the suffocating rules of the political game .
12 Though consent is undeniably a defence to an action for conversion , there are difficulties in reconciling this result , sensible as it may seem , with general principles of agency , for since Y's act was unauthorised it could only be effective if done within an ostensible authority — but that doctrine is inapplicable to undisclosed agency .
13 Such reliance upon Baldwin and the dependability of the Conservatives did not work , and produced within the Conservative Party internal divisions which saw Neville Chamberlain being suggested as a possible alternative to Baldwin and the emergence of the Empire Party , led by Lord Beaverbrook and the press barons , as a challenge to Baldwin 's leadership .
14 The Act distinguished clearly between ‘ rules of conduct , ’ which are to be scrutinised and approved within the new statutory machinery , in which the ‘ designated judges : ’ see section 119(1) , each have a crucially important role to play : see Schedule 4 , paragraphs 5(10) , 11(10) and 16(4) , and ‘ mechanism for enforcing the rules of conduct : ’ see section 17(3) ( b ) .
15 Therefore , it is more accurate to state ( so far ) that collocation information ’ extracted from and used within a specific domain ’ can significantly improve the recognition process .
16 Instead , meaning and order is imposed on our lives as our behaviour , experiences , thoughts , feelings , and so on , are transformed into statistical data and interpreted within a scientific framework to which we have no access unless we 've been trained in the technical language of psychology .
17 The functionality of the gear-lever is thus seen to exist as a set of attributes of the intersection of the functional domains ( see Figure 2.24 ) , which are mapped and preserved within the geometric domain .
18 If bound in our Galaxy they must be travelling at around 0.1 per cent the speed of light ; if bound within the Solar System ( as Earth is ) their velocity must be nearer 0–01 per cent that of light .
19 In the work of F. A. Hayek , however , liberal values are articulated and defended within an intellectual framework which qualifies the rationalism and atomism of classical liberalism .
20 Studies of these entities can be conducted by Ph D students in any country , and the theses describing the results of such research will be written in the language of the researcher , and deposited within the particular system of bibliographic control which has evolved in that country .
21 In the autumn of 1950 the French put forward the Pleven Plan , their aim being to ensure that any German forces were split into small units and integrated within a European Defence Community ( EDC ) .
22 All five degree courses are organized and integrated within a common Faculty framework which makes it possible for students to opt for certain units outside their main subject area .
23 Agricultural produce is grown , processed and distributed within the one company , although these activities may , and usually do , take place in different parts of the world .
24 A deal is expected to be put together and announced within the next two weeks .
25 Minutes of the meetings are recorded and maintained within the Environmental Department .
26 Here , the project is planned and implemented within the permanent structure .
27 In the model of liberal democracy , interests are aggregated through political parties and expressed within the parliamentary system .
28 ‘ The landlords do that , ’ she said , and pointed to three small cottages that had been vacated and destroyed within the past 24 hours .
29 While there were many conflicts over all the new music ( and dance ) forms ( see , for example , Hustwitt 1983 ) , by the mid-1920s we can see the outlines of a new , laboriously constructed consensus , ‘ hotter ’ and radical elements squeezed out , new techniques smoothed and assimilated within a musical framework with links back to bourgeois traditions , socially centred on ‘ respectable ’ dancing and home-listening , and on traditional kinds of concert and opera-going ( see Frith 1983b ; 1988b ) .
30 Very gradually , the secure base that the mother provided ‘ out there ’ becomes absorbed and assimilated within the young child so that she is ‘ in here ’ and does not always have to be kept in sight .
  Next page