Example sentences of "in [det] [noun pl] [coord] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 We 've been lucky in that companies and organisations have been supportive of our appeal .
2 Again , the deposition of pollen is timed to suit its germination in that stigmas and anthers are synchronized , whereas the site for germination of a seed may occur randomly in time as well as space in the regenerating gaps of forest .
3 Thus , the voiceless velar environment exhibits merger in some instances and flip-flops in others ; no doubt , it would be possible to observe other varying patterns of approximation ( as for the meat/mate ‘ merger ’ , below ) .
4 If all these people are doing the same job officially in the real world we know that some people are more proficient than others that in some things or others , can you see how quickly go down that line and you say to yourself well Mr A you know he 's got all those there great but there are a few gaps .
5 All these and more were right to criticise the excessive prices paid in some bids and buy-outs , pushed by subsidised money and investment bankers ' greed for fees .
6 It was obviously very much a part of everyday life , to such an extent that " in some Grocers and Spice-sellers House , are to be found barrels filled with them ( dried petals ) " for use in soup and medicinal prescriptions .
7 ‘ Implicitly , if not explicitly , the doctoral thesis has come to be thought of in some countries and institutions as simply the demonstration that a certain amount of research methodology has been transmitted and received , with much less emphasis than used to be the case upon the nature and significance of the topic explored . ’
8 If this is so , there is considerable point to Beverley Halstead 's letter to Nature in which he argues that academic publication of the research results should be a requirement before the award of a Ph D , ( as is the case in some countries and institutions ) .
9 Indeed , I consider it more opportune than ever to extend to the entire ecclesiastical community an initiative already observed in some countries and regions that has yielded truly valuable pastoral results .
10 Do women have power in some areas and men in others ? — and to question the ways in which this data had been handled in existing sociological accounts .
11 The voluntary sector is characterised by fragmentation and poor co-ordination , leading to overlapping and gaps , with ample facilities in some areas and shortages in others .
12 In some industries and markets , it is still a major factor in market economics .
13 With growing educational opportunities , choice of job or profession has widened , although industrial recession and demographic factors have limited the opportunities in some businesses and trades .
14 But that does mean that we accept the movie myth that these forces are externalised or become absolute in some creatures or people .
15 In some towns and villages , Garland Day is a tradition in its own right .
16 ON SUNDAY November 22 , the Bath Area Group of the Swanage Railway Project chartered a ‘ Brakevan Tour ’ on the Severn Valley Railway for a return journey from Kidderminster to Bridgnorth taking in some loops and sidings that are not normally traversed by passenger trains .
17 It is , in fact , relatively obvious and uncontentious to argue that in some societies or sub-cultures the distinction between ‘ objective ’ and ‘ context-dependent ’ is more consciously drawn and given more weight than in others ( cf.
18 An example of a phonetic ( non-phonological ) difference in stress would be the stressing of verbs ending in ‘ -ise ’ in some Scots and Northern Irish accents ( e.g. ‘ realise ’ ) .
19 Shortages of professional staff are very severe in some places and over-reliance on foreign staff is not always in the patients ' best interests in an area where personal communication is so important .
20 Indeed , all these are coming to be used as powerful tools for tutors and learners in some schools and colleges already .
21 In the private service sector , where trade unions are less active , temporary workers often do not receive the same level of fringe benefits as permanent workers ; and in some organisations and industries they are paid at a lower rate — for example the statutory minimum rather than a higher , collectively bargained rate — than are comparable permanent workers [ see Chapter 7 ] .
22 ‘ I want to put in some shells and seaweed first . ’
23 With the coming of steam power and mechanisation by the 1840s , machines were working in some mills and life was very different .
24 Their visibility in sports and success in certain events led many to speculate on the reasons behind the supremacy of blacks in some sports and non-involvement in others .
25 ‘ Not long ago a campaign was launched in some republics and provinces to convert the branches of ‘ foreign' ’ organizations into separate basic organizations .
26 In some polytechnics and colleges students can proceed from a two-year Diploma in Higher Education to a first degree , and the CNAA has set up a Credit Accumulation and Transfer Scheme ( CATS ) which allows students to accumulate credits not only from a variety of higher education institutions but from accredited employer-based and experiential learning .
27 The pupils would then have access to an OPAC ( On-line public access catalogue ) similar to those available in some polytechnics and universities at present .
28 The emergence of the ‘ monarchical ’ bishop seems to have been more rapid in some regions and cities than others .
29 For the sake of the country 's geography , it may be that the growth of ‘ core ’ workers is concentrated more in some regions and types of area than in others .
30 In some subjects and topics , particularly in Mathematics and Science , English language embodies western thought patterns and there is a risk that translation may lead to fundamental misunderstandings .
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