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

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1 Once you 've pondered the crucial question of which is the bigger — Mount Everest or Blessed 's supremely affable ego , then the best course of action is simply to let the saltily ribald tidal wave of his enthusiasm for the Big Hill and its history wash over you .
2 Shevardnadze also made the startling claim that the Soviet leadership had foreseen the revolutionary changes in Eastern Europe in 1989 .
3 He suddenly felt some sympathy for her : her intentions had been evil but Jane could hardly have foreseen the appalling results of her maliciousness — if indeed Jim Lancaster had stormed off and murdered his wife .
4 ‘ As no one could have foreseen the sharp fall in the base rate after Black Wednesday , it would have been impossible to predict that variable rates and the cost of fixed rate mortgages would have fallen so far . ’
5 At the trial of the action the plaintiff conceded that the defendants could not have foreseen the precise chain of events which led to the explosion .
6 It is less sure that anyone in 1975 could have foreseen the dramatic increase in the demand for places in the ten years to follow .
7 This is a tiny fraction of order books and likely contracts of £2billion , although strikes at home lasting several days and the subsequent long stoppage at Boeing has limited the prospective gain above the £230million aerospace turnover achieved last year .
8 The President and most Republican legislators favoured a version that would have limited the extra benefits to no more than 20 weeks , and objected to the qualification changes .
9 All this has no doubt limited the perceived usefulness of union membership to workers .
10 For instance , when the government sold British Telecom to private shareholders in 1984 , it set up the Office of Telecommunications as the regulatory agency and limited the permitted rise in telephone charges to 3 per cent below the rate of inflation .
11 In addition , HARPY limited the average number of competitors over a stretch of speech and also constrained their identity , thereby ensuring that the items were easily discriminable as measured by their acoustic match scores .
12 Yet the very factors which inhibited the politicization of Russia 's business classes also limited the political value of their support .
13 Even if the lobbyist is not entirely successful in putting across his point of view , he may have limited the potential damage of the new legislation .
14 The general subordination of the British state to the interests of civil society has limited the relative autonomy of state groups , although they have had a certain freedom to ‘ navigate ’ between the competing demands of different groups and classes , for example in the realm of industrial relations ( Edwards 1986 : 168–72 ) .
15 When considering whether the Revolution should be seen as a victory for Whig principles or not , historians have tended to take a constitutional frame of reference — the more a particular historian believes the Revolution settlement limited the constitutional powers of the Crown , then the more Whiggish the Revolution is said to be .
16 The World Cup limited the domestic appearances of the leading players so that an unusually high number of 103 turned out for the six first-class teams .
17 As a broad generalization , the half-century since the end of the Second World War , has witnessed the gradual retreat of state hierarchical coordination in favour of greater elements of market coordination .
18 The same trends are observable in both Zambia and in Tanzania where we have witnessed the gradual shift of power and responsibilities from a University organised Institute to a national one and from the Institute into the Ministry itself .
19 The humanist Renaissance of the late Middle Ages had already witnessed the gradual emergence of reasoning independent of the church .
20 Leapor would have witnessed the early stages of this reorganization in agriculture .
21 A dread of torture and physical mutilation haunts the countryside — not least because so many people have witnessed the mutilated bodies of victims dumped in the street by the security forces .
22 He had already witnessed the incredible speed of his lethal opponent , and also of his fellow oriental whom he had shot and killed in the Control Room .
23 In Scotland during the past year we have witnessed the distasteful spectacle of Dounreay scouring the planet and touting for business as the nuclear prostitute of the world , seeking to sign as many contracts as possible to dispose of other countries ' spent nuclear fuel while the clock ticks away towards the 1994 deadline set by the Government when funding for the 250 MW prototype fast reactor will cease .
24 She had witnessed the on-off charm for herself when he had thought himself alone in the Feathers ' coffee-room .
25 Writing in 1972 , McGregor suggested that : ‘ the last two decades have witnessed the cumulative removal of restraints both of custom and law upon behaviour , and upon their public portrayal in print or in the visual arts ’ .
26 We have witnessed the massive growth in unemployment , a huge increase in the number of part-time and home workers , many of them accepting a grotesquely low rate of pay .
27 Making reference to the emotive yet eccentric account compiled by the historian , Michelet , who had witnessed the French Revolution as a young boy , Kiefer has constructed twenty beds for the female martyrs and heroines of that great and terrible event .
28 The post-war period had witnessed the growing professionalisation of the sport .
29 The UKCS asset rationalisation programme has realised the following benefits since 1 January 1992 :
30 Governments and the EC , he argues , have not realised the inherent threats to manufacturing in the West .
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