Example sentences of "[prep] [prep] [adj] [noun pl] of " in BNC.

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1 Look s s seriously the point the point I 'm making is that for for most jobs of an average sort of size , what happens under A C E scale fees as I understand it , if I 'm wrong I 'm I stand corrected .
2 Consequently graduates from the Department of Hotel and Catering Management are highly sought after in all areas of the industry .
3 She did n't ask me what my prospects were , or how much I earned , or whether I was sleeping with her daughter — all of which I had thought of as possible avenues of conversation .
4 According to this account the formation of associations during pre-exposure and the loss of associability are not to be thought of as rival interpretations of latent inhibition .
5 For the foreseeable future , units involving the microcomputer as a teaching aid can only contribute to a very small proportion of curriculum time — at present certainly no more than a few hundred hours out of about 50,000 hours of ‘ different ’ teaching in the school curriculum for ages 5 to 18 .
6 British restaurant cooking had been despaired of after fifteen years of siege conditions until the counter-attack of The Good Food Guide , founded in 1951 by Raymond Postgate , a pioneering bon vivant , and compiled by himself , his friends and any members of the public who could be bothered to write in with their recommendations ( one who did was a lion tamer ) .
7 Sixty of them and put them out and make them into nice little lines and that and see what things you 'd have to multiply together to make twelve or what numbers you 'd multiply together cos it 'd be so many sets of like four sets of three or three sets of four .
8 doing in lots of in all sorts of places in the B Tec level come in .
9 Disengagement is just one of many social theories which underlie what Phillipson and Walker ( 1986 ) call ‘ Acquiescent Functionalism ’ — ‘ a body of thought about ageing which attributes the causes of most of the problems of old people to the natural consequences of physical decrescence and mental inflexibility or the failures of individual adjustment to ageing and retirement , instead of to contemporary developments of the state , the economy and social inequality ’ .
10 It is now clear , for instance , that before the nineteenth century illegitimacy rates were low and that bastardy was disapproved of by all sections of society , not just the church authorities .
11 We may consider , for instance , the fact that women are discriminated against in certain areas of life ostensibly because of the way they speak .
12 Disabled people are widely discriminated against in most types of employment including the health and caring professions .
13 What would they feel like on other parts of her body ?
14 You just ca n't envisage , you know , why and how they managed to afford such extravagant graves , and it 's like on two sides of a road , on one side you can only go in , and if you 're on a guided tour , erm , otherwise you 've got to , be like , somebody to do with the grave .
15 The discipline which all of them write about with varying levels of emphasis and directness is the only means in every sphere of human activity by which the desideratum of love is liberated and all pain finally destroyed .
16 He also had a singing part — he had to sing ‘ Do n't Blame Me ’ — which was eventually left on the cutting room floor , along with about twenty minutes of Nicholson 's spoken dialogue .
17 I mean , we we get bound up with with all sorts of domestic things , and will , I expect , later today .
18 With with larger groups of children
19 We currently have a small office in Harlow , staffed by full-time member er , and we 'll be opening in late November er , an of , a fully staffing housing management office er , with with three members of staff , it 'll be located in the town centre .
20 Despite its location in Britain 's most prosperous region , Kent , and especially East Kent , is a relatively depressed area with above average levels of unemployment .
21 These include low cost remedial measures ( AIP ) , Safe Travel to School and speed enforcement which are dealt with in separate sections of this Plan .
22 Dagenham boss John Still said : ‘ That was the best match that I have been involved with in 14 years of management .
23 In De Officiis he describes two ways that men can do wrong , ‘ by force or by fraud ’ , and says that In order to guard against such destructiveness Cicero urges that ‘ pretence and concealment [ simulatio dissimulatioque ] should be done away with in all departments of our daily life ’ .
24 When looking at the amount of the benefit under s740 of TA 1988 some assistance may be obtained by looking at how the problem is dealt with in other areas of taxation .
25 Rights can be earned ( to a salary at the end of the month or to a place on the Board ) , they can be purchased ( by paying an entrance fee ) , they can be entered into in all sorts of ways ( white has the right to move first in chess ) .
26 Several points of interest relating to horns are dealt with at other parts of regulation 37 as below .
27 Matters of turn-over tax and customs and excise were dealt with by comprehensive pieces of legislation .
28 A second reason is that wider economic consequences may be better dealt with by other branches of economic policy : for example , regional policy can be designed specifically to deal with localized unemployment problems , R&D policy to deal with the promotion of R&D and the protection of intellectual property rights .
29 According to the functionalist , of course , facial expression and lip-reading are likely to be dealt with by distinct parts of the information-processing system because the nature of the information that they convey is so different .
30 In other areas , notably in relation to the right of freedom of association and collective bargaining , the Commission is abstaining from any action , because it believes that these measures are best dealt with by social partners of industry , or , as appropriate , by the Member States .
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