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

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1 Beyond this and seemingly in open countryside , is the American Pavilion housed in what was formerly a 16C wine press belonging to the Schönborn Palace .
2 Then he looked at the old eagle again and shaking his head said , ‘ During the last war when I was a prisoner I knew men who were nearer to death than this and yet by some force of will or perhaps some power greater than us they survived .
3 I think you should , allowances should be at at least support you in that and also from those allowances other resources that provide for research etcetera for the members .
4 I 'd like you to play with that and just with twelve pennies until you 've found all the ways of arranging them like that .
5 saying you know , we need a sum of money and Mary will help me with the marketing of that and hopefully after that we would , go on enough to keep us going , so hopefully by the time Christmas comes
6 Thank you , Rosemary , for sharing your neckband with us all and also for such a well-written pattern .
7 When children hear both terms in the same instruction or in the same condition , they do not treat more and less as synonymous .
8 Now , conflicts between instinctual drives and the controlling agency occur more and more as social and political conflicts , and less and less as purely psychological ones .
9 Women are having to rely more and more on civil ’ remedies ’ for protection .
10 As agriculture became more intensive , with larger amounts of the same crop grown on the same land year after year , farmers came to rely more and more on chemical pesticides .
11 And so although his early contributors had come from the European tradition which preceded the Great War , by the early Thirties he had come to rely more and more upon British contributors .
12 I 've begun to think more and more like this — it is terribly cruel of fate to have put these twenty years between us .
13 ‘ I get to feel more and more like some splendid Regency buck surviving sadly into the horrible reign of Prince Albert the Good . ’
14 As we perceive more and more this equal spirit in all things , we pass into that equality of the spirit ; as we dwell more and more in this universal spirit , we become universal beings ; as we grow more and more aware of this eternal , we put on our eternity and are for ever .
15 Without a convincing explanation and an insistence that the checks must be done properly , many students will become careless and slap dash when they are on their own and away from close supervision .
16 It is easy to see why Richard Strauss admired him so much : there is not only the immense natural craftsmanship , but an ease of invention comparable to his own and indeed in one or two places containing suggestions of some of his own harmonic manner .
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