Example sentences of "[vb -s] [adv prt] in [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 This field , again , is important , since without it , as we shall see , great harm to living creatures could occur as a result of what goes on in outer space .
2 Well I think really what one must look for now is more detailed research on what actually goes on in mixed ability classrooms .
3 Well I think really what one must look for now is more detailed research on what actually goes on in mixed ability classrooms .
4 He then goes on in separate chapters to cover sexism , racism , ageism and disablism .
5 We are all curious to know what really goes on in other families and all equally determined to preserve the privacy of our own family life .
6 She goes on in formulaic terms : ( " He [ my husband ] loves me and I love him well ; our love is as true as steel " )
7 What I have proposed in the foregoing pages is a conscious surrender to the culturalists of much of the activity that now goes on in English degrees , in order to retain something more coherent , defensible , and inherently valuable .
8 Fig. 1.2 shows the essentials of the system design process but since feed-back paths are omitted this figure does not indicate either the repetition and iteration which goes on in operational design or the different possible priorities and variability in the order of decision-making .
9 Mexico apart ( and for domestic reasons no American government can ignore Mexico ) , the administration is not much bothered with what goes on in Latin America .
10 The Gujerati community is fully aware of cases like that of Mrs X. Scandals such as hers are everybody 's business , but while in India or East Africa such situations would not have been tolerated , and sons would be forced to take their mothers back , in Britain the community looks on in fascinated horror but does nothing .
11 The doyen of insider trading may be a shadow of his former power after paying fines of $100million and spending two years in prison , but his legacy lives on in criminal trials on both sides of the Atlantic .
12 This stands out in stark contrast to the four-speed 'box in the 500SL we tested last December .
13 Although it is the mood disturbance that stands out in affective psychosis , individuals who meet the criteria for either the ‘ unipolar ’ or the ‘ bipolar ’ form ( as they are sometimes called ) sometimes also show features reminiscent of schizophrenia , as we shall see for several of the subjects evaluated in this book .
14 Surely the way of transgressors is hard , and stands out in striking contrast to the ways of the Lord , which are experienced by those who walk therein to be pleasant and peaceful .
15 Re-visioning our economy is the opportunity James Robertson holds out in Future Wealth — A New Economics for the 21st Century ( Cassell ) .
16 She looks round in mock horror .
17 As Reyburn observes : ‘ Of course the necessity to flush ping-pong balls down the toilet rarely crops up in everyday life but the owner of a double-trap ‘ siphonic ’ can take comfort from the fact that she has the toilet for the job when it arises . ’
18 Lynda Moss agrees : ‘ 1,1,1-trichloroethane rarely crops up in published syntheses — a heck of a lot of syntheses use methylene chloride [ dichloromethane ] however ’ .
19 At the top of the screen blinks the word ’ menu ’ and beneath this list winks out in blinding-white neon letters on the black display- keyboards , horns , endless types of drums .
20 27 It hangs on in frosty weather ( 6 )
21 This means that the painting changes slightly when seen from different angles and the title over the central image flashes up in iridescent colours .
22 The only form of giving that shows up in formal accounts is cash .
23 Even when as in the Act 2 aria for Medea 's servant , Neris , he attempts a flowing canzonetta and decks it with a distinctive bassoon obligato , he lets the number go on far too long , or so it seems when as here the bassoon roars out in determined competition with the mezzo , Claire Powell .
24 Even when as in the Act 2 aria for Medea 's servant , Neris , he attempts a flowing canzonetta and decks it with a distinctive bassoon obligato , he lets the number go on far too long , or so it seems when as here the bassoon roars out in determined competition with the mezzo , Claire Powell .
25 55 Forteana Paul Sieveking goes up in large clouds
26 But I suppose you get insight er twenty per cent was she ca n't outrun him I think this bit she gets killed and she turns up in Little England , this come on .
27 The light-weight rock froth itself is quite familiar , and turns up in British bathrooms ; it is , of course , pumice .
28 How well a foreigner gets on in Italian football , he thinks , depends on his own attitude .
29 That constancy of composition relationship breaks down in enclosed seas and bays for example where er addition processes , I E er salts which have been eroded from river water , may alter the composition .
30 Such research is necessary for understanding the mental processes involved in object recognition ; how object recognition may develop ; and , how such recognition breaks down in certain cases of brain damage .
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