Example sentences of "finds in the " in BNC.

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1 Layton appreciates in Leonard the patrician Jew aspects that he finds so ridiculous in others ; Leonard , the anti-establishment ( and anti-everything else ! ) that he finds in the older man .
2 Laqueur finds in the political , cultural , and economic transformations of the eighteenth century a context in which ‘ the articulation of radical differences between the sexes became culturally imperative ’ .
3 The homosexual ‘ knows intimately in himself the generality that he finds in the other ’ : ‘ in the homosexual act I remain locked within my body , narcissistically contemplating in the other an excitement that is the mirror of my own ’ ( pp. 307 , 310 ) .
4 In 1978 he delivered a lecture at the London University Institute of Education , accompanied by his photographs of the magnificent finds in the tombs , which brought gasps from the audience .
5 A crofter was defined in 1883 by the Napier Commission ( the first of several Royal Commissions on the subject ) as ‘ a small tenant of land with or without a lease , who finds in the cultivation of his holding a material proportion of his occupation , earnings and sustenance , and who pays rent directly to the proprietor ’ .
6 We do not know how many individual meteorite falls are represented by the wealth of Japanese meteorite finds in the Yamato and Belgica mountains .
7 As a well-known London character with a penchant for miniature kites , and a lecturer on sewing standards , his advice supplements what one finds in the manufacturers ' manuals .
8 His vision leads him to seek a saviour that he finds in the proletariat , albeit heavily cloaked in ‘ ideology ’ .
9 Perhaps the best known exponent of this model of general education in the UK is Hirst ( 1969 ; 1974 ) , but it is familiar in most countries , and results in the relatively academic type of secondary school curriculum that one finds in the English grammar school , the French Lycée or the German Gymnasium , with appropriate national differences of emphasis ( the English have always stressed ‘ process ’ rather than ‘ breadth ’ ) .
10 And slowly one pieces together from the records , from the archaeological finds in the local museum , and from the evidence of one 's own eyes , what has happened .
11 ‘ In the sixteenth century , doctors thought they could tell a person 's health by looking into their eyes — I like to see a man 's soul ’ ; such souls as he finds in the Saracen 's Head and other pubs .
12 The ship 's electrics panel , which one usually finds in the navigating area for convenience , has been removed to above the vanity in the starboard after cabin .
13 But the man who desires to know himself more completely — however strange and confusing his discoveries may be — he is drawn further within until he finds in the texts a mirror of his own complexity .
14 The following are examples of the petty attempts at subversion which one finds in the old books on election law .
15 None of the usual muck one finds in the lungs when a man 's fighting for his breath .
16 Instead one finds in the small works a straightforward enjoyment of the sea and sailing which , while they are no doubt less important in terms of Setch 's output as a whole , give a significant insight into his everyday appreciation of the coastal sea and weather .
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