Example sentences of "with [art] [adj] exceptions " in BNC.

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1 It is true that primary schools are providing a better educational service ( with the possible exceptions of spelling and mental arithmetic ) than they were when I began teaching in 1948 .
2 Gap junctions are distributed in a wide variety of tissues , with the possible exceptions of adult skeletal muscles and most neurones .
3 Now the the problem with the dealing with I I suspect with the major exceptions policy is that if you had it could you move fast enough in order to cope with that sort of animal appearing on your horizon which you wanted to capture .
4 The requirements of the [ draft ] FRS apply to all capital instruments with the following exceptions :
5 Comments were generally good , with the following exceptions : longer lunch better , later start on Friday ( × 2 ) , could be longer , less intensive , less rushed .
6 Paragraph 33(b) and 890 of the National Conditions of Service cover all aspects of the Management Offer with the following exceptions .
7 What happened in the 1980S was that , with the partial exceptions of Britain and Japan , nearly all governments held on to monopoly state control of the telephone network and also largely stuck to their traditional club of equipment suppliers ; consequently AT&T had little foreign success in its chosen strengths of network provision and major equipment items .
8 Most teachers were aware of the presence of this group but unaware of the reason for its development , with the notable exceptions of a teacher from South Africa and the deputy headmistress .
9 Most risk factors sought in previous studies were also examined in the present study , with the notable exceptions of Helicobacter pylori infection , gastric acid secretion , pepsinogen , gastrin , and blood group .
10 In the recent past , most of the universities have not markedly changed the proportion of their research into Scottish geology , with the clear exceptions of Glasgow and London , both of which have significantly reduced the amount of such work , and of Aberdeen and Dundee , both of which have greatly increased their Scottish geological research .
11 Remarkably , every single word in both is ordinary if colloquial English ; every single word is also ( with the doubtful exceptions of ‘ logs ’ and ‘ nipped ’ ) rooted in Old English .
12 The literature , in fact , has left regulatory misconduct , deviant organizational behaviour and organizations as the objects of enforcement activity virtually untouched , with the celebrated exceptions of Sutherland ( 1940 ; 1949 ) , Clinard ( 1952 , 1979 ) and Geis ( 1967 , 1968 ) .
13 Although , with the important exceptions of Berridge ( 1985 ) and Fisher et al.
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