Example sentences of "[adv] brought [adv prt] [prep] the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Auction sales of individual collections , perhaps brought about by the death of the owner , can be a marvellous way of acquiring mature fish of high quality at a bargain price .
2 When Leo made some small movement , she was suddenly brought back to the present and became mortifyingly aware that she had just emptied her heart to a virtual stranger .
3 In the old days there was no physical access from the running lines to Govan car sheds and workshops , so stock was only brought out of the tunnels for repair and maintenance , which necessitated lifting the vehicles bodily off the track and up through pits into the workshops by means of a large overhead crane .
4 As Pressman reports , Woonerf streets exhibit a stronger social cohesiveness , much brought about by the involvement of the residents themselves in a sophisticated process of planning their own surroundings .
5 Blue watchers are saying that IBM chief John Akers will be out by March or April and that the company in its infinite wisdom will give the job to one of those retired IBMers it just just brought back from the pasture , probably Kaspar Cassoni .
6 Durkheim saw the centrality of the prison as largely brought about by the operation of the first part of his first law : prison was a milder penalty than capital and corporal punishments and so became adopted as collective sentiments became more sympathetic to the criminal 's suffering .
7 Yet any comparison of British and foreign economic performance over the period since 1945 is soon brought up against the effects of different institutional forms .
8 Often , the criteria — even in the academic world — are assumed , and are hardly brought out into the open .
9 Ready-made trees , specially brought over from the Continent , provided an instantly acceptable environment .
10 we were always brought up in the country , you know
11 Bowlby has been under pressure ever since the Cheltenham Gold Cup , over his riding tactics on Golden Freeze , coincidentally brought down at The Chair in Thursday 's John Hughes Memorial Chase here .
12 At Grassington the miners worked in small setts , or meers , and there were regular disputes over boundaries and underground trespass despite the presence of a Barmoot Court and Barmaster , and other customs anciently brought in from the lead districts of Derbyshire .
13 If the user needs a file on the jukebox , it is automatically brought back to the server disk for faster access .
14 In the ‘ humanistic ’ view , learning is also brought about by the promotion of experiential well-being , but in this case by affective self -regulation .
15 The high number of joyful expressions about the salvation of the Führer , which is emphasized as a true stroke of fortune for the German people , is not only proof of the devotion and loyalty of the soldiers to the Führer , but of the firm determination of the soldiers to fight and conquer for him , which is also brought out in the letters
16 News of the Romans and the pending invasion was probably brought in by the merchants .
17 Another frequent problem is that brood mares are often brought in from the paddock about a month before the horse is due to foal , and are put in a little paddock next to the owner 's house so that ‘ an eye can be kept on her . ’
18 This is perfectly normal when the body goes through the physiological changes which are often brought about by the Technique .
19 Moreover , the largest areas that are affected ( Table 7.1 ) are rangelands where overgrazing is the major culprit though , as Cloudsley-Thompson ( 1988 ) has discussed , this is often brought about by the encroachment on grazing lands by cash-crop farmers .
20 The claim of a holy Gad that those who have fellowship with him should not only be acquitted and accounted righteous , but actually and progressively be made righteous in an ethical sense is strongly brought out in the Pauline letters .
21 ‘ I have near-photographic recall , ’ he sneered , and Kate blinked , immediately brought back to the present .
22 This dimension to progressive thought was well brought out by the school of ‘ New Liberalism ’ which was associated in particular with T. H. Green and L. T. Hobhouse .
23 Or was it just the effect of the refreshment so kindly brought round by the Norfolk team !
24 The process of deflation of the finer constituents from deserts probably accentuates the dominance of coarse waste , initially brought about by the importance of mechanical weathering .
25 Crookes was thus very important in preparing the way for the ‘ discovery ’ of the electron by J. J. Thomson in 1897 , in an experiment in which cathode rays were deflected by a magnetic field , and then brought back to the zero point by an electric field .
26 And , yes , I saw the incident at Southampton , where Mark Nicholas was eventually given out to a disputed close catch and then brought back to the crease .
27 He played only once in that series but was then brought back for the rubber in India and made a big impact , so that when he had Steele 's wicket at Headingley he chalked up his hundredth Test wicket in the record time of two years 144 days .
28 Still fresh and green at the back end , it could provide a juicy supplement to the diet of a early calving cow , or for the smallholder 's animals newly brought in to the byre for the winter .
29 Green and McCrory were allegedly brought back for the Norris murder .
30 We are therefore brought back to the problem which Weismann felt was insoluble .
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