Example sentences of "small and [adv] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 He would be deeply moved and encouraged , in his dreams , even by the smallest and most ordinary bud ; his nostrils got raw and caked with fine dirt as he knelt down and sniffed and sniffed to try and catch the first smell of green life .
2 Austria 's smallest and most westerly province , bordering on the Tryol , Lichtenstein , Switzerland and Germany , Vorarlberg has been dubbed The Children 's Wonderland .
3 LITTLE GULL Larus minutus The smallest and most tern-like gull of the region .
4 ‘ To Lawrence , the world is intrinsically a beautiful place , yet we will turn it into filth to get a smaller and less beautiful object out of it . ’
5 Here , in the valley , the world seems to be constructed on a smaller and more delicate scale ; the fields are mere paddocks , so reduced that from this height their hedgerows appear a network of dark-green threads overspreading the paler green of the grass … such is the vale of Blackmoor . ’
6 Magritte 's career has not been examined in such detail in Britain since Sylvester curated a smaller and more exclusive exhibition for the Tate Gallery in 1969 .
7 The Pan-Africanist Congress ( PAC ) , the ANC 's smaller and more radical rival , suffered setbacks in April with the deaths of several prominent members in separate incidents .
8 Although a spouse may be protected if he or she stays in the home , if the partner goes into permanent residential care , the spouse may want to move into smaller and more appropriate accommodation .
9 A new national organisation he believed should be on a smaller and more economical scale than required by the struggle up to 1833 ; functioning as a watchdog over legislation and supplying information to ministers and public its style had to be ‘ very prudent and discreet ’ .
10 By about 1740 and probably earlier a definite distinction had emerged between the ‘ formal Cabinet ’ , a relatively large body which included a number of holders of great court and ceremonial offices , and the ‘ effective Cabinet ’ , a much smaller and more compact group of ministers .
11 The little border town of Ludlow may well be a twelfth-century example of planning on a smaller and more rudimentary scale , but the most notable examples come from the thirteenth century — Salisbury , New Winchelsea , the five bastide towns laid out by Edward I in North Wales , and part of Kingston-upon-Hull , laid out by Edward from 1293 onwards .
12 INTEREST in portable computers of all kinds has been stimulated by the Gulf War , when everything from tanks and armoured vehicles to airmen 's flying helmets were fitted with a range of increasingly smaller and more rugged technology .
13 The command hierarchy in such an enterprise may be more clearly structured , and responsibilities better delimited , than in a smaller and more informal partnership .
14 It has always happened , of course , but in the old days , when the stock market was a smaller and more human place , the intimacy of dealing lent some protection .
15 Then it moved away at a brisk trot , the small and incredibly ugly imp that was perching on its lid watching the scenery with interest .
16 More significantly , perhaps , I was annoyed because I expect this financial services organisation to recognise the totality of its relationship to me when making decisions in respect of specific transactions ; in this case to realise that its interest in my house should be adequate collateral for a small and presumably temporary overdraft .
17 Miranda thought of M. Apéritif last night , and decided she would let him go further when she next saw him , in spite of the lizard darting of his small and oddly hard tongue in the kiss she 'd allowed him at the door of the hotel .
18 This small and seemingly harmless creature carries a hidden weapon .
19 This can only be the web of Textrix denticulata , a small and prettily marked relative of the large house spider , which makes sheet webs in houses and outhouses .
20 Claiming that he is not ‘ presenting any idyllic picture of the rural parish ’ , Eliot takes as his ‘ norm , the ideal of a small and mostly self-contained group attached to the soil … with a kind of unity which may be designed , but which also has to grow through generations ’ .
21 It feeds off the passions of a small and economically dependent country and the emotional demands it places on the game .
22 The hierarchy was headed by the imperial family and court nobility , but these comprised a numerically small and socially insignificant group , largely detached from the rest of society .
23 Restored and repainted in RAF workshops it was being formally handed over — together with glasses of champagne Bourbon or Scotch — by the Ambassador 's wife in front of a small and mainly military audience .
24 Instead , the Government had supported a daily press in Dar es Salaam , which catered for a relatively small and mainly urban readership .
25 And Kraemer and Ossenkopp ( 1986 ) , in an experiment formally equivalent to that reported by Kraemer and Roberts , were able to find only a small and statistically unreliable effect using milk as the flavour ( see Fig. 4.3 ) .
26 Whether this burning interest came from a transmigration from a previous existence I do not know , but it may have been sparked off by a small and relatively insignificant incident which occurred in the spring of 1929 .
27 The adolescent is emerging from the small and comparatively cushioned world to which he has belonged and is having to face a great deal of pressure from many different relationships .
28 In the relatively small and somewhat isolated world of the courts , men of ‘ foreign ’ origin acted as natural and essential intermediaries between England and Europe .
29 This already small and still dwindling breed needs to acquire the comprehensive training that such a course provides .
30 In practise these tidal waves can not quite maintain the alignment , resulting in the tides making a small and roughly constant angle with respect to the line joining the two bodies .
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