Example sentences of "put [adv] [prep] a [adj] " in BNC.

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1 However , if it is intended for the community , the contents must reflect the concerns of the community , with comments on the wider world and put together with a certain degree of journalistic skill .
2 As the text of the gospels was dissected , there came indeed to appear layers or strata ; some bits looked earlier than others ; the documents were made up out of a weaving of stories and sayings circulating in the earliest Church and then put together by a single hand or more than one hand .
3 It 's a like er using the same components but put together in a different way .
4 Mass production dates from the time of Henry Ford , who was the first man to adopt the principle of the production line , when he used this approach to produce a restricted range of motor cars put together in a flow-line process .
5 Put in on a slow wicket , Montgomeryshire were bundled out for just 65 taking up virtually 45 overs .
6 I mean do you do better if you put in on a large stake as opposed to a small stake ?
7 Put in on an unyielding wicket , Colwyn were heavily indebted to all-rounder Glyn Gibbons whose 26 not out averted total batting humiliation .
8 ‘ I put in for a supplementary allocation only last week , ’ he said .
9 This can be clearly seen at St Oswald 's in Gloucester , where the many phases of development are more clear in elevation than plan , and where , ironically , the earliest masonry is up above arches put in at a later date .
10 Cyclamen may also be raised from seed sown now in pots and pans and put outside in a shaded cold frame .
11 She 'd seen the card I put up in a local shop , advertising the top flat .
12 Coalport international brand director , David Butler , said after the presentation : ‘ This is a most exciting development , put across in an informative and enjoyable way .
13 And it is just that : a point of view , a vision , put forward through a fine prose style , that gives the work of Frazer a position above that of other scholars of equal erudition and perhaps greater ingenuity , and which gives him an inevitable and growing influence over the contemporary mind .
14 Michael Scott describes the practical proposals put forward in a new report on this contentious issue .
15 The range of views put forward in a small sample of recent works on the subject ( see Abbott , 1987 ; Berardi , 1985 ; George , 1985 ; Tullis and Hollist , 1986 ) , illustrates well the complexities of the issues and the difficulty of solving them .
16 Prof Midwinter was commenting on four options for single-tier councils put forward in a Scottish Office consultation document .
17 After the Labour group meeting , which was held in private , Councillor Keith Geddes , leader of the Lothian administration , said the referendum depended on the proposals put forward in a white paper which Mr Lang was due to publish .
18 These proposals , with their aspirations for the future , put forward in a popular picture magazine , illustrate strikingly an important theme in British wartime politics .
19 It 's all drawing information from this same central store of information erm it 's a way of sharing information amongst a lot of different people for a lot of different reasons , information which previously would have been separated and almost impossible to put together without a great deal of effort .
20 It 's a way of sharing information amongst a lot of different people for a lot of different reasons , information which previously would have been separated and almost impossible to put together without a great deal of effort .
21 Ideas are organisations of information that the human mind chooses to put together in a particular way .
22 As compensation for Polly 's keeping the house , Preston had received the sum of twenty thousand pounds to put down on a small flat .
23 And a fair bit left over to put away for a rainy day , I daresay . ’
24 That bias towards comfort has meant compromises as far as sporting handling is concerned ; so you do n't have to put up with a jittery ride over poorly made up roads .
25 ‘ I really am glad to be home , even if it means having to put up with a typical British summer .
26 Rather like the systems employed by general practitioners , there are advantages and disadvantages to both methods , with patients perhaps preferring the former system and being prepared to put up with a long delay once in the clinic to a worried wait of two or three days .
27 Natural mothers had to put up with a great deal .
28 As a result of the closure of Owlerton Stadium , they stated , supporters would ‘ have to put up with a certain amount of incontinence ’ .
29 ‘ You will all have to put up with a certain amount of unwelcome attention from the Press , but I have warned them that we will not tolerate any interference with your golf .
30 They may be content to put up with a certain proportion of customer complaints for a given volume of business .
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