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

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1 In 1822 he was commissioned as lieutenant in the 9th Royal Dragoons , transferring to the 12th Lancers in 1826 .
2 In 1900 he received a regular commission as lieutenant in the 6th battalion of the Lancashire Fusiliers .
3 The 22-year-old No 8 was the key to a back row supremacy that absorbed , disheartened and ultimately destroyed Oxford 's thrust for glory in the 111th Bowring Bowl Varsity match .
4 Those things which confer privilege ( quality shops , education , flats and health care ) are acquired through privilege in the first place ; they can not be had for money .
5 The faith of Greenfield , Hildyard and Olson in the consequences of the particular literacy practices which they describe will appear as faith in the particular social conventions within which such practice became established .
6 These themes can be illustrated in a newspaper report about discrimination in the British Army .
7 Thus demands for change in the two spheres must interlink .
8 If fundholders were to be a lever for change in the reorganised National Health Service there is evidence from this study that they are achieving this objective .
9 In this way the programme has been a catalyst for change in the various local communities , bringing about personal development and the widening of skills at family and community level , both for Community Mothers and the parents they visit .
10 Reich thought that there were logical consequences of psychoanalytic findings , which led to a need for change in the moral teachings and practice of educators in schools , the home , and in churches .
11 ( The second vote was to be of significance only if a majority expressed a desire for change in the first . )
12 She highlights the importance of a research-based , problem-solving approach , a holistic assessment and the need for change in the nurse-patient relationship towards a greater participation and equality .
13 The manufacturers found themselves ‘ excluded alike from the County Commission of the Peace and the Municipal Corporation ’ , and from ‘ this essentially ‘ caste ’ struggle between the Tory squires and the radical manufacturers ’ ( Webb and Webb 1963:93 ) there emerged not only the widening of the parliamentary franchise but also the pressure for change in the urban areas .
14 This chapter first describes how the British and Spanish political strategies discussed in the previous chapter have created pressures for change in the public enterprises , pressures encapsulated in the idea of ‘ commercialism ’ .
15 This does n't mean putting on silly voices ; but , rather , allowing those confrontations that are likely to create possibilities for change in the dramatic situation , that of themselves create difficult dilemmas .
16 So too has his historian , confronted by a growing body of evidence for change in the ninth-century economy .
17 They will be both a force for stability and a force for change in the next Parliament whatever role we play . ’
18 Elean : So you see hope for change in the younger generation .
19 The Displex closed-cycle refrigeration system has earned a reputation for reliability in the demanding field of low-temperature research .
20 This he does at the highest level in the HERMS file structure , defining boxes in the work file for sub-teams to work within and inputting technical details as text in the technical file ; this latter entry could be considerable .
21 Culture always has an ideological function for consumerism in the capitalist global system , so all cultural transnational practices in this sphere are at the same time ideological practices , thus cultural-ideological .
22 Regardless of the cell populations involved , Beguinot et al and our own finding that liadin derived peptides stimulate adenylate cyclase activity in small intestinal mucosa homogenates from patients who have not been treated suggests a role for cAMP in the pathophysiological processes of coeliac disease .
23 We can assess the direct effect of age ( X 2 ) on preparedness to break the law controlling for income in the same way .
24 With such lowly opposition he saw no cause for worry in the injured Hapgood , the off-form Hulme and the ‘ flu invalids John , Lambert and Coleman .
25 ‘ A night out with John Minton , ’ Lehmann recorded in his diary in October 1951 , ‘ for which he arrived with a bunch of carnations in the wildest , gayest form , having been on a jag for three nights — and continued it that night in spite of my attempts at restraint ( which were spoiled by laughing all the time ) , flinging his arms about , shouting shrilly with highly risqué asseverations at the White Tower ( at which Tennessee [ Williams ] appeared for a hallucinatory moment ) , becoming embarrassingly affectionate and enthusiastic about me , and pouring money out for champagne in the Caribbean and another unidentified night club . ’
26 Almost every dairy farm in Ayrshire produced Dunlop cheese and it became a thriving small industry which was an important source of income for the county 's farmers throughout the many difficult times for agriculture in the late 18th and 19th centuries .
27 Samples of these birdtables are available for inspection in the Botanical Gardens , High Street , Oxford
28 The list should be available for inspection in the Municipal Buildings , Dale Street , next month .
29 Lord Salmon said he could find no sensible basis for the " astonishing " proposition that the valuer should be liable for negligence in the first instance , but not in the second .
30 The realisation of this will be a major step for progress in the deaf community .
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