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

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1 Does he agree that reductions in personal taxation are a highly efficacious means of stimulating simultaneously the demand and the supply sides of the economy ?
2 Aye with used just the grain that was grown on the croft and brought in a lot of the feed .
3 After another four weeks of treatment with diuretic alone the study treatments were crossed over .
4 The company I worked for folded just a couple of weeks ago . ’
5 Indeed , it was far from clear how the abolition of these authorities would save money .
6 Members frequently make the comment that they know little or nothing about the structure of the IBOA , the decision-making process — in short how the IBOA operates .
7 No I mean just just life in general not the weather .
8 In general only a minority of holidays are affected in this way and most changes to the published arrangements are small and whenever possible these changes will be advised at the time of booking or as quickly as possible after they occur .
9 The main advantage of a limited company is that in general only the company and not the individual is liable for the business debts .
10 Now this means that erm putting it in its simplest way that for any of the districts in North Yorkshire and for Harrogate and if I may presume to say so in Selby in particular where the need is greatest , the local authorities must have the ability to designate what is provocatively called green field land , if they so wish in their local plan , proper consultations and strategic policies , they must have that freedom to do that if they are to be able to offer in their district land which will prove attractive to erm employment generating uses .
11 Many other examples of Peleean eruptions are now known , especially among the volcanoes in the Philippine Islands , and they have been closely studied , since there is considerable interest in how these eruptions occur and in particular how the material in a nuee is actually transported .
12 This importance of the stochastic specification plays a critical role in cross-section models in particular wherever the data under study suffer from censoring , truncation or grouping .
13 The exhibits in the Brussels exhibition seem to have had in common only a concentration on clearly defined simple forms and a corresponding limitation of colour , and very few of them had anything at all in common with the work of Picasso and Braque .
14 Blessed are those who are persecuted in holy right the kingdom of heaven is theirs .
15 The zeds of the fire-escapes looked as though they were used in earnest twice a week they were grimed to a cinder .
16 At first the governments tried to brazen out the dangers .
17 He still has a match against world champions Germany to negotiate next Saturday , but his much-maligned players have shown they still possess the spark to brazen out the autumn qualifying triple against Poland , Holland and San Marino .
18 Dad wasted no words and said that it was his bird in the box whereupon C … tried to brazen out the situation by saying he had found the cockbird in the garden and was taking it to the market in the morning .
19 She ironed their tiny strips of white embroidered cuffs and collars herself , and sewed them on fresh nearly every day .
20 Okay and erm when Dennis was on okay about a week ago
21 Insert split rings along each tape , spacing them at an equal distance apart , at a distance to equal twice the depth of the bottom pelmet starting at lath channel .
22 At Holnicote in Selworthy parish in Somerset , a modified plough was kept to clean out the gutters of the water leats , while the Knight family , who reclaimed Exmoor forest in the nineteenth century , kept records of water temperatures , showing clearly the effect of slightly warmer spring water on the growth of the grass .
23 In the British context of the 1980s the political project that has come to be identified as ‘ Thatcherism ’ has commonly been seen as an attempt to legitimate both the reintegration of a restructured British economy into the global economy and the revision of the relationship between the state and civil society that the preferred version of restructuring required .
24 The answer is that after mating they produce a tiny mobile larvae totally different to the adult this might drift for miles on ocean current before settling into the fixed adult form Down Norwick power station in North Wales , generates the electricity by pump storage , in off peak hours thousands of gallons of water are pumped from a lower lake to an upper lake , when the demand for electricity is high bowels are opened and water falls back through turbine to the lower lake again , this generates the power To ensure that the lower lake would never flood the was diverted through mile long tunnel in the mountain side , no one knew for certain how the salmon , the trout and even rarer that used to migrate up the old river would cope with the tunnels , pitch darkness and slow flowing water .
25 Now they they they do n't like bodies lying around unattended so the incinerators are always open for that .
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