Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 His round , brown eyes regarded me obliquely , a little suspiciously above the high cheekbones .
2 Moral indignation sits rather uneasily on the hon. Gentleman 's shoulders , particularly on this matter .
3 The birth rate also continued to decline , though most slowly among the poorest .
4 Those who commit these crimes must be pursued most vigorously under the criminal law ; if they are allowed to get away with it others will take encouragement to follow their example .
5 Meaning is not an issue that arises for the Russian Formalists , and it is here that they differ most fundamentally from the American New Critics with whom they otherwise have so many similarities .
6 There has been much debate about the real underlying purposes of this legislation which has been generally vaunted , most importantly in the major textbooks , as designed to ease the buying and selling of land ( see Chapter 10 ) .
7 The promotion of language across the curriculum in the wake of the Bullock Report ( 1975 ) has been followed by proposals for pastoral care across the curriculum ( Marland , 1980 ) , and most importantly in the present context , for a coordinated whole-school approach to study skills ( Irving and Snape , 1979 ) .
8 During the 1930s , however , it was the Conservatives who capitalized most effectively on the larger consequences of the Wall Street Crash , using them not only to bring down a Labour Government and introduce tariffs aimed at imperial consolidation , but also to promote among the masses the spirit of patriotic self-congratulation so eloquently projected by Stanley Baldwin :
9 At first the gospel of family limitation appears to have been spread most effectively among the middle classes before it percolated through to the working classes .
10 At the upper end of the social and economic scale the mood of protest has been captured most effectively by the small but respected Republican Party .
11 Bhabha writes of how Fanon ‘ speaks most effectively from the uncertain interstices of historical change : from the area of ambivalence between race and sexuality , out of an unresolved contradiction between culture and class ; from deep within the struggle of psychic representation and social reality ’ ( foreword to Fanon , Black Skin , White Masks , p. ix ) .
12 In the final analysis the full impact of reform will be felt most keenly by the thousands of Scottish men and women whose income falls the wrong side of the line .
13 Their total estimate is for 220,000 dwellings annually until 1991 ( and rather less in the last decade of the century ) .
14 Manville was dead long before the heavy iron chains fastened around his ankles dragged his body to the bottom of the Potomac River .
15 The ultrastructure of the larger nerves resembles that of ganglia , with an outer lamella of collagen fibres in a mucopolysaccharide matrix secreted by perineurial cells , and with other glial cells lying most abundantly near the larger axons ( Osborne , 1966 ; Huddart , 1971 b ) .
16 Only during the last 100 years has the active cultivation of aquatic plants for decoration been practised , and then widely only during the last 25 years .
17 And now Mrs Stych stood rather dazedly inside the front door and wondered if she was in the right house .
18 Moreover , all the circuit properties of a line are distributed along its length , uniformly so in the ideal situation of a uniformly constructed line .
19 Unfortunately for Tory Anglicans , things got out of hand , and they had to concede much more than they would have wanted ( most obviously on the central issue of the transfer of the Crown ) .
20 This manifests itself most obviously at the technical level where the same basic skills can be applied in different markets .
21 It was inevitable that the war in Asia would affect politics in Western Europe , most obviously in the military sphere .
22 There is hardly any difference between the sexes , except that the casque or bonnet at the back of the head and tubercles at the nostrils are a little larger , and the beautiful rosy salmon colour a little deeper in the male bird … ’
23 It is " recursive " because the same rule ( in this case a branching rule ) is applied locally all over the growing tree .
24 Kitty took about a dozen tender puffs and then pressed the pad of her index finger most gently on the glowing weed .
25 ‘ This is what you call the laconicum ? ’ she asked , drawing back rather dubiously from the dank breath that distilled out of the earth .
26 The simple truth is that we have both bowled extremely professionally throughout the last series against England .
27 Only rarely in the late 1940s did he achieve in paint the finesse that now characterised his figure drawings .
28 Scotland 's tackling at the weekend was akin to a holding operation ; not surprising really as only rarely in the domestic sevens circuit do you see the shuddering finality which the Samoans , Fijians and Canadians bring to their defensive chopping .
29 Morse looked at her now — perhaps properly for the first time .
30 The expanse of wooden floor , cool and clean and shining … the double bed with its hand-appliquéd quilt in a complex pattern of pastels and white … the stand of leafy potted plants , the antique free-standing mirror , whose glass oval would take in the whole length of a woman in evening dress … the modern wardrobe , built-in , that blended so skilfully into the architectural mood of the house while providing all the space for clothing that she could possibly need … two original paintings on the walls , each an impressionistic landscape in subtle , imaginative colour …
  Next page