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

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1 They are , for example , responsible for rather different population sizes .
2 Now that you have the contract you will have seen of course that the commercial exploitation of the data on the tape will be subject to further negotiation between presumably Cristian de Wilde and myself .
3 It decided that only fundamental , structural changes to the organization and management of services would bring about the environment necessary for locally integrated community care to flourish .
4 … selection should not be left to individual librarians to be based on ‘ the mood of the speaker ’ , and this is not happening in authorities that are recognising the need for properly thought-out selection policies based on the political policies of the local authority , together with an analysis of the local community , in the context of wider statutory provision across the authority .
5 Moreover , numerical examples , experimental games , and such empirical case studies as have been carried out ( see , for example , Rees , 1993 ) seem to suggest that typically punishments far outweigh the gains to short-run deviation for empirically reasonable discount rates and so it is really not hard to explain collusion .
6 Limited direct-connect support for widely available TCP/IP capabilities are also included .
7 The capacity and speed of optoelectronics make it an ideal means for simplifying switching and routing with optical networking a possibility for perhaps 10 years time — a prospect that researchers from University College are currently co-researching with British Telecommunications Plc in Harlow .
8 For perhaps three seconds guilt was all they did feel , the simple , shocked guilt they would have felt before any adult .
9 What is serious about so much school work generally is that so frequently it seems to fail to have any deep effect on life outside the classroom .
10 It is , in fact , impossible for management to have a direct , personal feeling and knowledge about so many business environments .
11 The explanation which Hall later gave for this was that although the War Department competition was dead , he was seeking official approval for the principle that , for all important government buildings in London , ‘ a competition , limited or otherwise , should take place , instead of the work being committed , as a matter of course to an officer of the establishment ’ .
12 Freire originally developed his ideas through highly successful literacy programs for slumdwellers in Brazil .
13 A number of different factors seem to have contributed to this extensive scale of decentralization from the major metropolitan areas , including changes in residential preferences and the search by companies for less cramped factory sites and for cheaper and less organized labour such as married women .
14 As described in more detail in Chapters 5 and 6 , the latter results from the growth in employment in public-sector services in the late 1960s and early 1970s and the search by companies for less cramped factory sites and for cheaper and less unionized labour such as married women ( Fothergill and Gudgin , 1982 ; Massey , 1984 ) .
15 The implications for less partial equilibrium behaviour are less clear .
16 Control of well-qualified and experienced managers and administrators in the state apparatus is difficult for less able party officials and causes resentment .
17 Whereas before it was used for less damaging crosscountry skiing and walkers .
18 Stewart was sent off 18 minutes from the end of a niggly clash for foolishly slapping Apollon keeper Michalis Christophi across the head as he picked himself up from an innocent penalty-area collision .
19 In its existing form industrialised Britain makes for constantly variable labour needs , and this gives little security to the employees .
20 The seventies were certainly a period of great change in attitudes within the Customs & Excise in general , and on the cutters in particular we saw great improvements in many ways with the acquisition of better technical equipment such as highly sophisticated radio communication , and the development of international relations .
21 Abelson regards the use of ‘ Fax ’ machines as an aid to the working of invisible colleges , due to the rapid transmission , and the potential for much higher image quality .
22 The Report also called for much stricter consent conditions for each works and explored the desirability of transferring sewage loadings either within the catchment or by diversion to the Edinburgh sewerage system .
23 This suggests that there will be a need for much greater government action if age discrimination is to be reduced .
24 At the same time the severity of the recession led to demands for much greater state intervention in industry .
25 You think about perhaps another example Host Host is n't a key task is it ?
26 Sheena Falconer , senior lecturer in textiles , has been told by the principal , Dr David Kennedy , that there is room for only one textile lecturer , but that she could stay on as an ordinary lecturer — the post held by her sister , Barbara Diack .
27 Mrs Falconer , a senior lecturer in textiles , has been told there is funding for only one textile lecturer in the school , but that she could remain on the staff if she accepted demotion to ordinary lecturer — a post already held by her sister , Barbara Diack .
28 And this was true — for only mature Battle Brothers were permitted to duel .
29 It was also perfectly timed , for only last week Hendry was overtaken by Jimmy White at the head of the provisional world rankings — the first time since May 1990 that he has been removed from top spot .
30 It was increasingly argued that the international capitalist order had-had its day and that post-war recovery would be achieved rather differently , through much greater State involvement .
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