Example sentences of "[vb mod] [verb] [adv prt] a new " in BNC.

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1 Once it has been killed , the kitten may trigger off a new reaction .
2 ‘ … we find it unfortunate that Upjohn failed to respond at all readily to requests made by the Licensing Authority as early as 1990 , that they should carry out a new post-marketing surveillance study ’ .
3 Wilson ( 17 ) has suggested that to exploit the potential market , producers must take on a new , invigorating , active , forward-looking stance and lay aside the conservatism , traditionalism and isolation which have hindered development in the past .
4 Under this circumstance , the ‘ old ’ attitudinal stance must take on a new meaning , if it is to be repeated in the changed context , inasmuch as it will be directed against different counter-attitudes .
5 Today , in the early 1990s there seems to be every possibility their taste for autocracy and power might persuade the police that secrecy should take on a new dimension , so that sedition could acquire new status as a deviance , while even the ‘ espionage ’ of ethnography could well become actionable .
6 For Geoffroy , a change in the environment might trigger off a new pattern of growth in the organism — but the result was determined more by the laws of growth than by the adaptive needs of the organism .
7 You have to say you ca n't do that I 'll make up a new game to play .
8 And , initiative succeeding , brighter futures for 15 million people in the North of England could light up a new way to many more .
9 Enterprise intends to make free supplies of Highgate Mild and M&B Mild available so that pubs could try out a new Bass beer for their range .
10 Both there and at Keetmanshoep the Germans built headquarters stations which could take on a new strategic role in time of war .
11 The introduction of the rabbit into Australia offered a classic illustration of how a species could take over a new environment in which there were no natural predators .
12 While a white working-class female psychologist may take on a new professional identity which erases her class background , a black woman psychologist of any class is always distanced from such an identity by her ‘ race , .
13 Such movements , however , do not necessarily and simply entail the substitution of a smaller conjugally-based family for a traditional extended family ; rather it would appear that at these times kin may take on a new significance , and that we may need to look at a network of relationships much wider than the conjugal family .
14 Finance may take on a new urgency .
15 Liberal Democrat candidate Suzanne Fletcher said if her party were in power they would bring in a new type of rented housing , called partnership housing , which would cater for middle income groups wanting to rent rather than buy , built through public and private money .
16 Liberal Democrat candidate Suzanne Fletcher said if her party were in power they would bring in a new type of rented housing , called partnership housing , which would cater for middle income groups wanting to rent rather than buy , built through public and private money .
17 Something that he did n't take into account when working out forecasts , however , was that ICL would set up a new subsidiary , ICL PC GmbH .
18 Another faction was led by the conservative former NSF secretary Velicu Redina , who declared that he would set up a new social democratic NSF .
19 A joint German Unity Council , chaired by Brandt , would draw up a new German constitution .
20 The King took the opportunity by the need to renew Bank of Scotland 's monopoly north of the Border and said in essence ( and in German ) ‘ No , we shall set up a new large bank , which will be on our side and which we shall call ‘ Royal . ’
21 His long-held belief that spinners could not be trusted had been vindicated , and from now on Test cricket would take on a new dimension .
22 Best of all , his work would take on a new virility once he rooted himself in the earth and responded to what he called its ‘ music ’ , experiencing its moods as ‘ symphonic , dramatic ’ .
23 I can look after her , Dorothea thought , and we will do the garden together , I shall take on a new lease of life .
24 The growing economic and physical hardships of the later stages of the Pacific War , and the inability of the authorities reformed with a view to providing equality of opportunity , in the hope that this would back up a new , genuinely democratic social structure permitting a high level of individual social mobility .
25 This change would open up a new potential for managers and doctors to invest in shared programmes .
26 In particular , the New Moon present in your own birth sign on the 29th will trigger off a new period of some really quite remarkable and reassuring developments in your very personal life .
27 In the Gospel we have been told that Jesus will bring about a new exodus ( 9:31 ) by his death and resurrection at Jerusalem : a release from a worse bondage and a more terrible death than that which befell the Israelites in Egypt .
28 It is this hope that will bring about a new and better world .
29 We will set up a new Family Credit telephone advice service to support working families .
30 We will set up a new Business Sponsorship for Sport scheme .
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