Example sentences of "[vb infin] within [art] [det] [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | If you are told that your employment is to end immediately , but that you will be paid salary for your notice period , that will fall within the former category . |
2 | While it may not fall within the same category as Dances with Wolves as an illustration of a time and people grossly misrepresented , it is a period piece of some strength and charm which just falls short of the epithet epic . |
3 | This is what Crane Holdings should do within a few months . |
4 | The churches were usually brick built , and even when their walls did not crack and warp under the impact of the process , there remains , according to Romanian architects , the threat that their very bricks could crumble within a few years . |
5 | Your holiday abroad should follow within a few months while your memory is fresh . |
6 | She would drown within a few minutes . |
7 | For example , a reaction to a particular food may occur within a few minutes of eating a food , or after a day or two . |
8 | Erosion may be very considerable , but , because the area of net measurement of soil movement is large , sedimentation may occur within the same unit and therefore net erosion is estimated to be small ( see also Blandford 1981 ) . |
9 | The dog should return within a few minutes , but if not , search in the direction where you last saw your pet . |
10 | When told by them that the sales of budgerigar seed were disastrous and the market might easily disappear within a few years , Mrs Franklin came back with what you may think was a simple answer — but it was profound in terms of changing British public opinion — she said , " Breed your own consumers . " |
11 | They warn that the number of lakes affected may double within a few decades unless air pollution in Europe is halved . |
12 | Traditionally bureaucracy has been described as a role culture , but there is no reason to suppose that the different cultures can not all exist within the same organisation particularly if the organisation is as large and diverse as a government department or a local authority . |
13 | Grazes and torn fins will usually heal within a few days , but if there is any sign of infection by bacteria ( which causes the wound to become inflamed ) or fungus ( resulting in cotton wool growths ) treatment with a general external parasitic remedy is recommended . |
14 | The water-soluble vitamins , however , are not usually stored in the body in any great amount , so deficiency can develop within a few weeks or months if the diet is poor . |
15 | Conceivably the entire lake could die within a few years . |
16 | Almost all of them will die within a few weeks of being shed . |
17 | Most fatalities from T. canis infection occur during the pulmonary phase , and pups which have been heavily infected transplacentally may die within a few days of birth . |
18 | A customer walking into a Barclays branch can leave within a few minutes having bought or sold such shares as he wants . |
19 | Clerk to the justices Robert Whitehouse said the £400 screens should arrive within a few weeks . |
20 | He also said that " we are going to show how a revolution can be enacted through democratic principles , how democracy can be practised with one party " and announced that the National Assembly would reassemble within a few months in order to approve an electoral law which would lead to the holding of direct legislative elections in 1993 . |
21 | It 's probably best not to feed your fish for the first day or so as they settle in ( though some fish will feed within a few minutes of being stocked ) . |
22 | You may live within a few metres of many if not most of the plant and animal species ever recorded in Britain , and perhaps a few that are new to science . |
23 | Its tail will shrink within a few hours of departure . |
24 | ‘ Do n't worry , it 'll decay within a few days . ’ |
25 | If his pains do n't subside within a few weeks , he really ought to see the doctor . |
26 | In a similar line of argument , Reynolds 's Newspaper ( 14 August 1898 ) viewed the Hooligan panic as an indictment of the hypocrisy of a civilisation that took ‘ so painful an interest about moral handkerchiefs and hymn books for the barbarians of the wild Soudan ’ while turning a blind eye towards ‘ the far wilder barbarians they may find within a few paces from their own street-doors ’ . |