Example sentences of "[noun pl] [to-vb] [adv prt] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Plans to carry out similar programmes in other resorts will depend on the success of the first two schemes . |
2 | But Make has no plans to carry out any research and development outside the US . |
3 | The committee will be broken down into four district working groups covering Hartlepool , North Tees , Middlesbrough and Langbaurgh , as well as task groups to carry out specific functions . |
4 | At Level One students will work together in small groups to carry out small scale investigations into aspects of life in the local area . |
5 | The strategy unit has marshalled the efforts of several Australian research groups to carry out new analyses on socioeconomic factors . |
6 | It is not always possible to give adequate thought to the future when caught up in the day-to-day running of an operation , but if you live the business , as Sir Hector unashamedly does , there are always less hectic times to mull over major issues . |
7 | Dalton proposed to introduce a Bill to give financial help to local authorities to carry out major town expansion in their own areas to relieve overcrowding in the areas of other authorities . |
8 | She urged health authorities to carry out urgent research into the problem . |
9 | Attempts to scale up these systems beyond their intended domain have met with little success . |
10 | Several attempts to carry out such studies , however , have shown the great logistic difficulties entailed , which may prevent such a study in the future . |
11 | It can be difficult but necessary at times to carry out this study and to slowly change our own techniques to keep in date with modern developments . |
12 | ‘ He 'll need sons to carry on this place . ’ |
13 | ( Totally homogenous capital and labour markets ; constant returns to scale over all ranges of output ; marginal productivity pricing for all factors ; continuously variable relationships between factors over time ; land as an insignificant input . ) |
14 | Now , they say they are going ahead with plans to go over High Force later this year . |
15 | The curved planks or tubes of cork are stacked out in the sun for three months or more to dry , then boiled for an hour or so with fungicides and antiseptics to kill off any bugs and moulds , and to soften the bark by extracting tannins and minerals . |
16 | The Caernarfon League decided to send a strongly worded letter of protest to the FA and the chairman urged individual clubs to write along similar lines . |
17 | If the Revenue is unwilling to publish an annual list , the only practicable alternative is to base the charge on the cost of the car , since it would be burdensome to expect employers to work out this information for themselves . |
18 | Despite new evidence that the brain damage caused by childhood exposure to lead as low as half the EC limit can affect people well into adulthood , in June 1990 , the UK dropped plans to pull out old lead pipes , in favour of the cheaper but less reliable chemical dosing method . |
19 | Unions also opposed a further government emergency measure of June 26 , creating a new wage indexing mechanism , which could only be used twice in a year and which forbade employers to pass on increased wage costs to consumers through higher prices . |
20 | TVEI funding has already enabled the Region to undertake a curriculum audit in schools , and allowed individual schools to carry out some development work . |
21 | In the light of this discussion I offer some indications as to how a strategy of reading might be applied to the study of racist discourses , and invite readers to try out this approach on the two study texts , not in order to produce ‘ the right answer ’ but to compare what is gained and what lost in detail and depth of understanding by applying this kind of model compared to the others . |
22 | It is for schools to work out balanced programmes for themselves , and the pressure is on to find ways of convincingly managing ever-increasing demands . |
23 | LIKE the fox and the hedgehog , two of the world 's great museums are resorting to strikingly different tactics to shake off unwelcome predators . |
24 | As you slowly lose weight you can programme little rewards for yourself , like a visit to the hairdresser for a restyle , new make-up , new glasses , a tour of the clothes shops to try out new styles , and so on . |
25 | The children also extended the new words to pick out further exemplars from the novel category , and , when given a choice ( with the introduction of a second novel word with further novel objects ) , the two-year-olds assumed that the second novel label must pick out as-yet-unnamed novel objects ( Golinkoff et al 1985 ) . |
26 | The villagers then shoot guns into the branches to ward off evil spirits . |
27 | We will introduce a new grant , paid through TECs , to help employers , voluntary groups or schools to set up after-school care and holiday arrangements . |
28 | We will encourage all schools to open up these facilities to local people in the evenings , at weekends and in school holidays . |
29 | She pushed harder still , willing her eyes to shoot out more power . |
30 | But perhaps the most worrying , if most ephemeral , comment is that researchers are unwilling to take risks to open up new lines of research ; they tend to stick to piecemeal additions to well-established paths . |