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

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1 And in part two tomorrow night , we 'll be focussing on the people who 'll be in the front line of the Sheehy reforms … the bobbies on the beat .
2 The OECD stated in late 1983 that acid rain damage represents 3 to 5% of the European Community Gross National Product — or between £33 billion and £44 billion per year while the first joint step to combat air pollution in the European Community came in March 1984 when Environment Ministers agreed that new industrial plants could not be built without authorization relating to specific limits for industrial emissions .
3 In March 1917 when news of the Russian revolution reached Paris , Modi went running to find his writer friend Ilya Ehrenburg , embraced him and began ‘ screeching enthusiastically ’ , so that Ehrenburg could barely make out what he was saying .
4 The problem is that there is no stage in the model in Figure 16 where damage should cause the specific behaviour of identifying words by slow serial identification of their individual letters .
5 It has already been noted in chapter 1 how efficiency and equity principles are inextricably linked .
6 We observed in chapter one how change in the nineteenth century affected every aspect of life and death , and how influence was exerted by two major currents — the Evangelical and the Benthamite .
7 Barnett 's account of the Cabinet meeting of 1 February shows that matters had improved little in the command and control post of the British system of government since that awful day at Chequers in November 1974 when gloom descended :
8 It was seen more as a patriotic form of national self-expression than as a pro-nazi organization and hence was not closed down in September 1939 when war was declared .
9 In paragraph four specifically paragraph four page seven .
10 For example , we saw in Fig. 15.9 how injection of very small quantities of acid and alkali produced regions of different colours ( appearing as different brightnesses in a black-and-white picture ) thus showing the main features of the flow pattern .
11 The curve is derived in the four-quadrant diagram shown in Fig. 4.11 where graph ( i ) shows the demand for labour function and graph ( iii ) shows the unemployment function ; graph ( ii ) depicts a 45 ° line which enables us to switch the demand for labour axis from being vertical in graph ( i ) to being horizontal in graph ( iii ) .
12 This is shown in Table 2.2 where column 1 shows the price ( decreasing from £8 per unit to zero ) , column 2 shows the quantity demanded over some time period ( increasing from 40,000 units to 200,000 units ) and column 3 shows the monopolist 's total revenue ( that is , price x quantity ) over the same time period .
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