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

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1 Enterprise zones — which seduce businesses into poor areas with attractive tax breaks — are currently back in vogue at the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development .
2 The acknowledged leader in modern first editions , which have been greatly in vogue for the last two years .
3 This new fashion for dressing a corpse was to remain in vogue for the next fifty years .
4 They were made in silver , Sheffield plate or earthenware and were in vogue from the mid-18th century until about 1820 .
5 This was much in vogue in the 1960s , due not only to the fashionable ideas of Marshall McLuhan , but the more serious earlier work by Wiener ( 1948 ) and Shannon and Weaver ( 1949 ) , but as time has passed doubts have grown not so much about its existence , but rather whether it does not constitute two distinct fields of machine and human communication , for which information theory can not provide a unifying paradigm .
6 Restio 's father 's portrait belongs to a different tradition from that in vogue in the Hellenistic world ( contrast fig. 14 ; compare fig. 16 ) .
7 Where the vines are ungrafted they are normally cultivated en foule , following the system of vine training which was universal in Champagne during the nineteenth century .
8 Written by Dom Pérignon 's pupil and immediate successor at Hautvillers , the treatise must be regarded as the most authoritative contemporary account , not only of the state of viticulture and viniculture in Champagne in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries , but also of Dom Pérignon 's particular contribution to the art of winemaking .
9 The children who were in Pindown for the longest periods could receive more than £50,000 .
10 But do make sure you 've returned your Design Controller or mylar sheet to the correct row and , in case of the mylar sheet , have scanned the correct row using the inspection light .
11 Common Law treated the mortgagee as the owner of the land in case of the ordinary legal mortgage ; Equity treated the mortgagor as still being in a sense owner .
12 A premium waiver in case of the main policy holder 's death or redundancy is also offered , plus a helpline , a second opinion and redundancy cover for up to 12 months .
13 Lawyer is undone in case of the loose shoelaces
14 A number of important cathedrals , minsters and churches were begun in the late thirteenth century in emulation of the French prototype .
15 ‘ Vesta ’ was his contribution to The Triumphes of Oriana ( London , 1601 ) , a collection of madrigals by twenty-four composers compiled by Morley in emulation of the Italian Trionfo di Dori ( Venice , 1592 ) to which Giovanni Gabrieli , Vecchi , Marenzio , de Monte , Croce , Striggio , Felice Anerio , Gastoldi , Palestrina , and others had contributed .
16 Eventually ownership of the large seizure was traced to the Captain , in connivance with the Chief Steward .
17 The republican Interior Ministry insisted that this was just a routine annual drill and was in no way linked to speculation in the Croatian press that the Yugoslav People 's Army ( JNA ) , in connivance with the Serbian authorities and Serb minority leaders in Croatia , was preparing a coup against Tudjman 's adminstration .
18 Indeed both women and men were so baptized and entered the people of God which was the church — in differentiation from the Jewish background in which only men were circumcised and fully a part of the religious people of Israel .
19 Nevertheless the ILP representatives on the Unity Campaign Committee were constantly in friction with the Communist Party over the tendency to encourage non-Socialists to join the Campaign .
20 I understand that Fergie was offering Webb in part-exchange during the close season and he is still interested in a swap deal involving Chelsea 's Andy Townsend .
21 The sun is arisen and is breaking forth in splendour over the Christian Church ( which is founded on a rock ) dispersing the clouds of night and illuminating , with his new-born light the benighted land .
22 The result is a bucking of current trends with the growth in spending outstripping rises in income for the first time in three years .
23 Although the UK figures would have shown a fall in income without the rapid increase in corporate recovery work ( up 31% to £40.1m ) , growth in the rest of Europe was stronger in the traditional areas of audit and business advisory services ( up 12% to £274m ) and tax consultancy ( up 8% to £93m ) .
24 AT A TIME when many private railways are suffering stagnant growth or even a decline , the Great Central Railway is enjoying a steady rise in income from the second year running .
25 This rise in consumption will create a further increase in income in the next period of £1.2 million over and above the initial increase and this in turn will bring forth more consumption spending .
26 Thus , it is not surprising that interaction between the two can result in cumulative movements in income for example , if income is rising at an increasing rate , both investment and consumption will be rising , causing further rises in income in the next period .
27 The major financial effect was for the Gazette which suffered a £1.3m drop in income against the original 1992 budget .
28 On the other hand despite the increase in funding during the last forty years , the UK spending on health as a proportion of national income is lower than that in most West European countries and considerably lower than in the USA ( see Figure 7.1 ) .
29 The money they are putting back in is money they are taking out , through cuts in funding of the Royal Hospital , the Home Help service , the social fund and the health service in general .
30 increase in funding for the coming year ?
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