Example sentences of "and in [adj] [pers pn] [vb base] " in BNC.

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1 The chairman was Sir John Newsom , and in 1966 we set to work .
2 And in 1913 we have Pound writing of Yeats , who had just published ‘ The Grey Rock ’ , that the latter is ‘ very fine , but his syntax is getting obscurer than Browning 's ’ , then confessing : ‘ I wonder which is worse , to die in the aromatic subtlety of a disappearing cadence ( à la ME ) or to stodge one 's nobility into an incomprehensible narrative , à la The Eagle ’ .
3 This knowledge is unfortunately of little help in actually factorising f and in general we have to be content with approximation methods .
4 Er , and in general we have a , er , panel of the non-executive directors who set the directors ' salary in relation to the other directors I am also on that panel er , but obviously not in relation to my own salary .
5 The rule is firmly established that we may not look at Hansard and in general I agree with it , for reasons which I gave last year in Beswick v. Beswick .
6 School playgrounds are supposed to be safe places , and in general I suppose that they are .
7 ‘ In one way they are excited for me and in another they do n't want me to go , ’ he said .
8 Then , again , and in this they point ahead to the invention of collage , the letters and numerals stress the material existence of the painting in another way : by applying to a canvas or sheet of paper letters , other pieces of paper or fragments of glass and tin — elements generally considered to be foreign to the technique of painting or drawing — the artist makes the spectator conscious of the canvas , panel or paper as a material object capable of receiving and supporting other objects .
9 Gagnon and Simon ( and Plummer ) seem to accept the existence of bodily potentialities on which ‘ sexuality ’ draws , and in this they do not seem far removed from Foucault 's version that what ‘ sexuality ’ plays upon are ‘ bodies , organs , somatic localisations , functions , anatamo-physiological systems , sensations , and pleasures ’ , which have no intrinsic unity or ‘ laws ’ of their own . ’
10 Her happy hunting-ground for the grotesque was among the ‘ non-U ’ , and in this I think her researches anticipated those of Nancy Mitford and Professor Ross .
11 Structures where economic relationships are primary we call class societies , and in these we refer to the different unequal groups as classes .
12 We deplore present day attempts to belittle or destroy it , and in particular we object to the propaganda of disbelief , doubt and dirt that the BBC projects into millions of homes through the television screen .
13 We pray for clear guidance for the leaders of the church , and in particular we pray for archbishops and bishops , as their words are reported by the media .
14 We pray for those who have been called to serve you full-time , and in particular we pray for the Christian workers in the city of Exeter .
15 That is , they stress the position of a person as producer rather than consumer , and in particular they emphasise the degree of control a producer has over other workers , and over the production process .
16 They also use sticks or grass stems to probe for food , and in particular they use them to ‘ fish ’ for giant termites .
17 The need to prepare schools and help to help schools prepare themselves for the erm review of the national curriculum the changes that they will have to deal with and in particular I think , erm to help secondary schools to come to terms with changes in key stage four and the likely erm opportunities there will be for a more diverse curriculum including eventually er the opportunities for more vocational programmes in schools and to assist schools
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