Example sentences of "[am/are] [adv] [prep] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | The huts are predominantly in valleys near rivers , and invariably the local area was swarming with mosquitos . |
2 | FILMS about the human sex act are rather like books on the same subject . |
3 | The similarities , however , are mostly in matters of device ( the piano arpeggios in the first movement Coda , for example , and the six-eight ending of the Rondo , tragic in Mozart , brilliant in Beethoven ) . |
4 | Comics are mostly by men with a masculine audience in mind . |
5 | Dr Gordon Moore , Intel chairman , said : ‘ We are badly in need of extra systems capacity and this part of the project will go ahead extremely rapidly . ’ |
6 | And , while they are badly in need of such innovations as a massive reafforestation programme , desalination facilities , an organised fishing industry , means to exploit their few mineral resources , and perhaps even tourism , they will not give up easily their island heritage . |
7 | Indeed , it is here above all that the contemporary ‘ law-and-order ’ enthusiasts who slap down ‘ permissiveness , as a postwar invention are badly in need of a history lesson . |
8 | And my teeth are in bad , all my teeth are badly in need of repair . |
9 | This small herd of 40 or 50 animals , though enclosed , still has the freedom of 135ha of land and the animals are rarely in contact with humans ; they live as a wild herd and exhibit many interesting behaviour patterns , which have been studied in the past by famous artists and very recently by Cambridge zoologist Stephen Hall , who has published his observations . |
10 | Members of the general public usually only respond and react to media content : they are rarely in control of media work . |
11 | When people fall short of their standards , and are thereby in breach of their injunctions , somewhere inside they start to feel badly about themselves , and to begin to doubt their worth and acceptability . |
12 | The latter said ‘ We are wholly in favour of a move away from E2L provision being made on a withdrawal basis , whether in language centres or separate units within schools . |
13 | Sculpture by Peter Briggs and drawings and watercolours by Martin Barré are on until mid-April at Barbier-Beltz . |
14 | In contrast , school-age children are most at risk to hazards in the outdoors environment , particularly in the roads and in the school playground . |
15 | The Employment Training Programme , set up in 1988 to help the long-term unemployed , gives a low priority to workers over the age of 54 who are regarded as non-mainstream ( indeed those over 60 are not eligible to participate ) , even though it is older workers who are most at risk of experiencing long-term unemployment . |
16 | However , contrary to popular myth , it is n't heroin injectors who are most at risk of contracting HIV . |
17 | The challenge is to identify at an early stage those who are most at risk of developing serious complications so that appropriate treatment may be given . |
18 | Within the elderly population , it is the very old ( i.e. those aged over 80 ) , women , those living alone , those from manual occupations and the disabled who are most at risk of experiencing poverty in later life ( Victor 1989a ) . |
19 | 4 Identify and explain which patients are most at risk of pressure sore development . |
20 | Spenser , or the inheritors of his estate , are most at risk of catching the same savage disease . |
21 | They are most at risk along our roads where the average family car can deposit a pound of lead ( 454g ) per year out of the exhaust pipe . |
22 | The soft and acid water areas of Scotland , and north-west England are most at risk from lead , and the East Anglian and Staffordshire areas from nitrates . |
23 | As children are those that are most at risk from impact by vehicles in housing areas , any search for safer streets should focus principally on them ( Figure 2.5 ) . |
24 | Although it is probable that the same applies to established onshore centres , the fact is that it is the offshore centres , especially those in the Caribbean , that are most at risk from drugs money . |
25 | If you have a fair , sensitive skin , your genetic capability of tanning may be limited and you are most at risk from burning and all the nasty effects of too much sunlight , including skin cancer . |
26 | The Marine Conservation Society has produced a leaflet explaining which species are most at risk from the souvenir trade . |
27 | The vaccinations will be introduced in october , but at first will only be available for children under one year old ; the age they are most at risk from this form of meningitis . |
28 | Sitters are most in demand over Christmas and school holidays . |
29 | One art dealer who supports the assemblyman is Richard Feigen , who maintains that new buyers entering the market are most in need of the proposed consumer protection . |
30 | The benefit should be given to those who are most in need of it . |