Example sentences of "[coord] [adv] [adv] [adv] the " in BNC.
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1 | But then the British — or perhaps more properly the English — deal best with their own . |
2 | Other approaches are marginalized as being ‘ theoretical ’ ( that is , not sufficiently practical ) or perhaps more properly the concern of another discipline . |
3 | For example the baby being born prematurely or perhaps more drastically the need for a Caesarian to be carried out . |
4 | So I think there is something qualitatively different when the subject , or perhaps more appropriately the object of sexual harassment are women . |
5 | The benefit of such consolidations — or perhaps more accurately the disadvantage of not treating a customer in his entirety — is nicely illustrated by my own personal experience with a highly respected financial services provider . |
6 | Perhaps it was a show of support for his disciplining of Gilchrist ; perhaps there was the feeling that Worrell had drifted away from the hub of West Indies cricket ; or perhaps once again the selectors simply could not bring themselves to appoint a black man . |
7 | " It 's called St. Stephen 's Green , or more usually just the Green . " |
8 | This term always had this broader sense until , in the mid-nineteenth century , it began to have a capital M and a personified sense restricted to the episcopate , or more often just the papacy , as holders of teaching authority ( see Congar , 1976 ; Hill , 1988 , pp. 75–88 ) . |
9 | The language of " compensation " long ago introduced by G.B. Gray , falls under the same criticism , and so too perhaps the use of " expletive " by R. Austerlitz . |
10 | It could also incorporate some features of the Weberian and Durkheimian traditions — and perhaps not only the ones which , as we have seen , have already been purloined by Marxism . |
11 | His reasoning is lengthy and perhaps not quite the same as that of the leading judgment . |
12 | And , if the situation with regard to individual psychological development and the evolution of culture is as I have represented it , then this is merely the first of many profound insights into the psychology of the ego — and perhaps most especially the superego — which can be expected but which were totally unobtainable as long as the individualistic fallacy blocked the way . |
13 | And all too soon the stilted conversation ran out . |
14 | The Industrial Revolution followed , and all too soon the peasant economy came to an end as the rural handworkers discarded their wheels and looms , and cloth was made in the mills . |
15 | This — masked in various ways — is at the root of a good many problems which demand attention from social workers and all too often the manner in which it develops runs along sexual lines , especially with girls . |
16 | In the 1980S the Basques have had much international publicity because of the passion and all too often the excesses of their campaign for separatism . |
17 | Local amenity societies and conservation groups therefore frequently oppose their construction — ; and all too often the houses remain unbuilt . |
18 | Planning policies tend to run behind developments and trends , and all too often the planning machine has given the impression of existing more for the benefit of those who run it ( professionals and politicians ) than those who are served by it . |
19 | For anything to do with the satisfaction of these needs was counted as an economic phenomenon , and thus not only the explanatory structure of the theory , but also its content , was taken to be constant . |
20 | I am of course old enough to remember the first railway made in England , and still more easily the first telegraph wires ; now we see people are not satisfied with these last , but must have telephone wires too . |
21 | Stalin 's protégé , Andrei Zhdanov , who controlled the arts and still more closely the artists and architects of the Soviet Union , had said that architecture alone ‘ is able to reflect the grandeur of the period in an objective way . |
22 | Notice the position of the hand on the boom and also how straight the arm is |
23 | Only in Petrushka is he seen to be the principal player in the action and even then only the actor-dancer 's complete commitment to the whole and complete loyalty to Fokine 's design make him dominate the action . |
24 | Although I can recall so clearly seeing my father off to the war , and even more clearly the Zeppelin , the mid-twenties are not so clear . |
25 | The publishing director of Burke 's Peerage is apparently concerned that the Prince ( and even more so the Princess ) of Wales are letting the side down in matters of etiquette . |
26 | The difficulties of constructing the road ( and even more so the railway ) are plain to see : much had to be cut out of the living rock , netted to arrest stonefalls , and at one point both pass through a tunnel . |
27 | When empty the ten-bay Framsden barn , and even more so the Paston barn which is built of stone , have the same noble proportions as the nave of a great church . |
28 | Very recently , in the 1950s and 1960s , there have been the Rex cats and the Scottish Fold cat , and even more recently the Somali and the Burmilla , although these are little more than crosses . |
29 | It is almost impossible to judge the attitudes of the non-noble Poles of Danzig and Pomerania at this time — and even less so the attitudes of the Kaszubians . |
30 | Something was clearly wrong with the Mr Prospector filly , and maybe not just the faster ground . |