Example sentences of "in [adv] [verb] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 This project examines the decision making process involved in successfully launching a new electronic product within the health care market .
2 But in so doing the Prime Minister overlooked two crucial aspects of what was decided at that summit .
3 Ford says it already meets the EC requirement for securing rear seat passengers and is no different from most other manufacturers in only fitting a 2-point centre belt .
4 There is a real danger in only doing the classical things — you 're OK with it for a time , but then you 're left high and dry when fashion moves on . ’
5 But Damon , who not only drove brilliantly but survived a late collision with Gerhard Berger 's Ferrari , showed true sportsmanship in warmly applauding the great Brazilian .
6 There is no point , though , in merely repeating a known pattern .
7 Brady stated that the agreement represented " a milestone in finally putting the Latin American debt crisis behind us " .
8 Erm , Mr Brighton was was critical of the County Council in just using the residual method to determine the size of the new settlement , er and then in in backing up that justification erm referred to work that is included in in Barton Willmore 's proof , I 've I have read this survey work quite carefully , and my understanding of it is is that erm by un undertaking a survey of settlements in the county , they have established , albeit f f f for information purposes only , a population threshold for a particular type of service , erm , in in the North Yorkshire context , erm the implication I I understand from that is is that that is being used to justify a fourteen hundred figure or or whatever it is to achieve the level of services that would would be required for a a balanced integrated community to use the words for the guidance .
9 ‘ He has no regard to the decreets of y[ou]r courts , but repells them currently , ’ the duke was told , and the writer added his own opinion of the intention of the bailie-depute in thus attacking a rival jurisdiction .
10 The charm of this village lies not only in the pleasing situation , but in being quite unspoilt by modern buildings , and in still retaining a genuine ‘ olde worlde ’ atmosphere .
11 Death duties , National Defence Contribution , perhaps other taxes or duties , would all be within the Revenue 's mind in deliberately choosing the wide word " taxation " , in order to make sure that their concession on transfers for other purposes should not be used to deprive the Revenue of other taxes than Income Tax or Sur-tax .
12 Maarouf Saad , the leftist mayor of Sidon , was fatally wounded in a fishermen 's demonstration and in further fighting the Lebanese national army — largely commanded , of course , by Christians — came into conflict with Muslim gunmen and the more radical of the PLO 's Palestinian guerrilla groups .
13 It is partly because they are desperate to divert attention from the recession — which they created , from which they can not escape and which will lose them the election — and partly because they are desperate to conceal the enormity of what they have done in wilfully impoverishing the poorer half of the nation .
14 Ironically , therefore , the French rejection of EDC resulted in what France , in originally introducing the Pleven Plan , had most desired to avoid : the creation of a separate West German army .
15 The market 's dramatic decline — from its 1989 peak of more than 600,000 barrels to about 400,000 last year — has had a sobering effect on brewers , and realism in now making a welcome return to their predictions of the market 's long-term potential .
16 In courteously making a special journey to Beeching 's home to induce him to accept the invitation , Gardiner incurred the Prime Minister 's displeasure : Dr Beeching should have been invited to call on the Lord Chancellor .
17 Although difficulties in reliably specifying the appropriate lexical input to phonological variables are reasonably well documented , they may be more widespread and pose a greater methodological problem than these rather scattered observations in the literature suggest .
18 In passing from one parish to another , in simply crossing a nameless brook or road , we may step back into fields that were created , not by the commissioners of Georgian times , but by the Tudor squire or perhaps even by his monastic predecessors in the fifteenth century .
19 Most of the responses from philosophers were not interested in simply repossessing the epistemological freight , they were keen to stop the whole project in its tracks .
20 The danger in exclusively privileging the socio-cultural context in the interpretation of human institutions and behaviour is that every social phenomenon becomes so context-dependent that it can not be translated across cultures .
21 Sometimes the newcomers have settled in without doing the original inhabitants any great harm — and so it is that the rabbit and the fallow deer have become accepted additions to Britain 's fauna .
22 Gerald said : ‘ I suppose somebody could have been in there doing the old man while I was trying to get in .
23 Gerald , pretending to a savoir faire he did not possess ; ‘ I suppose somebody could have been in there doing the old man while I was trying to get in … ’
24 The use-value of ‘ fancy ’ is clearly there for the Mills and Boon novel , which further satisfies Marx 's criteria for the ‘ commodity ’ in completely obliterating the actual process of production .
25 NETWORK is pleased to record and applaud the achievement of two members of ROADCARE 's staff in jointly winning the 1993 Civil/Structural Engineering prize awarded by Telford College of Further Education .
26 Oh yes , without trial , from both communities and secondly alongside it and in parallel introduce a new political initiative in Northern Ireland , to get the catholics and protestants involved in the administration of their own country where they live .
27 I have no ob no problems in actually singing the same tune as Gary what so ever .
28 The recruitment of migrant labour has also had what one might refer to as a series of indirect benefits , especially in the earlier phase of immigration , because Britain and the other importing countries were able to avoid the costs involved in actually producing the immigrant labour power , from the birth to the maturation of the workers concerned , and because of the lower demands on the welfare state of economically active , healthy , single , young men and women who nevertheless paid the same rate of taxation as other workers ( Gorz , 1970 ) .
29 Beginners , however , almost always try to secure contrast by alternating passages for strings and wind , and experience great difficulty in satisfactorily combining the two groups .
30 The author does a sterling job in painstakingly assembling a large corpus of evidence from a vast variety of sources , taking us through a welter of contemporary descriptions and extrapolating what are almost invariably convincing conclusions from the visual evidence .
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