Example sentences of "[vb past] in [adv] [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | This probably corresponds to location of the metal binding domain over the scissile bond , with the bithiazole and terminal amine aligned in either the 3'- or 5'- direction . |
2 | But British Telecom Mobile Communications is introducing a transatlantic paging service based on frequency-hopping technology — the first on which the same pager can used in either the UK or the US . |
3 | This followed the rediscovery of the Sarum Use , which had been a local medieval modification of the Roman rite , used in nearly every place in Britain by the end of the fifteenth century . |
4 | Also from stock came many of the set dressings , including one latticed wall divider used in virtually every episode for a different function . |
5 | If you think of the variety of commercials you see on TV , there are many different things you can do in commercials : animation ; live action , used in perhaps the majority of commercials ; puppetry ; mixed live action and animation ; computer graphics and picture modification ; a variety of special effects . |
6 | The one feature which occurred in almost every case was that patients had been discouraged from showing feeling and especially from weeping in childhood . |
7 | To take just one example : people still grossly underestimate the size of the language 's vocabulary — the most widely quoted figure is half a million words or so — an estimate based on the total headwords found in either the OED or Webster 's Third New International , which each contains around that number . |
8 | This idea finds an echo in many African countries but assumes a Marxist-Leninist view of the economic and social order found in only a handful of African ruling élites . |
9 | I have no recollection of how I found my way there in the dark , but I do remember having to knock up the concièrge , who grumbled in just the style portrayed in the cinema . |
10 | ‘ When we first moved in over a year ago I wrote to the police in the traffic section at Winchester about the situation in Holybourne , ’ said Mrs. Gilmour . |
11 | They said the light moved in just the way this one seemed to be doing . |
12 | Having managed to come by a decent bit of steak and kidney , he stood over the young maid , who came in once a week , until she had managed to produce a pie , later warmed up for dinner in the microwave . |
13 | She seemed in quite a hurry . ’ |
14 | ‘ It all happened in exactly the way we wanted it to . |
15 | The rules and institutions which regulated medieval agriculture and ordered rural society differed in almost every particular from place to place and from generation to generation . |
16 | As Professor Michael Prestwich reminds us , men such as Leyburne , Hastings , Odo de Grandson , or Sir John St John served in almost every part of Edward 's possessions : England , Aquitaine , Ponthieu , Wales , Ireland . |
17 | She 's appalled by the sentence which will see Clarke released in under a year . |
18 | Both Pen and Ferdinando rushed in immediately the carriage drew up at the door and wonderful was the reunion ; then within the hour the kindest of notes came from Mrs Browning begging her to find the time and energy to visit whenever she was able . |
19 | By the next field , the river curved in almost a right-angle so that by running diagonally across , they were able to cross the road and approach a place where , at the far side of the bridge , the ground shelved gently down to the water . |
20 | Julius returned in just a couple of minutes . |
21 | Early parsing algorithms worked in either a bottom-up or a top-down manner . |
22 | It must be appreciated that the spelling of Latin names varied in much the way that today Catharine , Catherine , Katharine , Katherine , Kathryn and Catrina are , for example , versions of a single form , hence in the list only the more obscure renderings are given . |
23 | The Moran training camp never materialized in quite the form Windley envisaged , the Masai , as usual with administrative projects , declining to extend their co-operation beyond token financial contributions . |
24 | Several had black or blue flecking on brindled or streaked red and white coats , or were yellow-and-white brindles , but still the white finching persisted in nearly every case . |
25 | I went to this party at Mr Midwinter 's and it 's a wonderful house with footmen and things , and I went in just the sort of clothes I 'd wear for a party here in Helsinki . |
26 | Last but not least , ‘ Carlisle ’ appeared in either the Dandy or Beano as a drawing in the 1950's . |
27 | In what seemed like a bizarre dress rehearsal of the fate awaiting his namesake , the Olympic sprinter Ben Johnson , words like ‘ drugs ’ , ‘ disgrace ’ , ‘ cheat ’ and ‘ liar ’ recurred in almost every newspaper . |
28 | By 1990 , Sudan had become enmeshed in almost every kind of economic and political crisis . |
29 | It loomed in almost every frame of the Fabians ' film — a sugar-loaf , bottle-green and black , its cliffs forbidding behind their skirt of angry white water . |
30 | Paul Keywood , 13 , and his 11-year-old brother Nathan saved the little boy 's life after discovering him in freezing conditions wrapped in only a towel . |