Example sentences of "of a [adv] [v-ing] [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Seb was working with Christian on top of a steadily rising haystack , the last of many . |
2 | Stones dropped from the top of the mast of a uniformly moving ship fell to the deck at the foot of the mast and not some distance from the mast , as Aristotle 's theory predicted . |
3 | Galileo took the argument further and claimed that the correctness of his law of inertia could be demonstrated by dropping a stone from the top of the mast of a uniformly moving ship and noting that it strikes the deck at the foot of the mast , although Galileo did not claim to have performed the experiment . |
4 | Even in a ‘ sweep ’ movie [ see 5 ] like The Last Emperor , O'Toole 's Law deprived him of a Best Supporting nomination . |
5 | This is fast enough for our central vision to be fooled into the illusion of a continuously moving picture . |
6 | In fact , the noise and movement were outward expressions of a relentlessly ticking brain . |
7 | explained the discrepancy between their finding and Cohen 's estimate of a longer lasting icon in the left visual field by arguing that the masking paradigm employed by Cohen does not allow measurement of icon persistence independently from encoding rate . |
8 | As he raced around one sharp corner he almost ran into the back of a slow moving lorry . |
9 | The humming and buzzing sounds of summery woods faded away into a dreadful silence , like the sudden stopping of a heavily ticking clock in a room with shrinking walls . |
10 | The progression associated with ionization of a strongly bonding level may show a maximum ( the vertical ionization energy ) well down the band , and we may not detect the ( 0 → 0 ) level ( the adiabatic ionization energy ) . |
11 | The factors which lead to breakdown in such caring , and in particular to the emergence of a predominantly rejecting relationship , are still imperfectly understood . |
12 | It is relevant to note here the author 's inclusion of scenes of a physically titillating dimension . |
13 | As she finished the last morsel of a perfectly running Brie , she said , sighing : |
14 | It was all too much for Sir Patrick Mayhew , the Northern Ireland Secretary , who appeared to take more than 40 winks with the tell tale sign of a rhythmically nodding head giving him away . |
15 | To the frockcoated bankers at Coutts he was a welcome asset in the account of a perennially trying customer . |
16 | My mother told me it was six ; I could not feel the lateness in the day , other than the westward blare of a reluctantly falling sun . |
17 | Despite the fact that there have been many reports describing the central effects of neuropeptides on gastric and pancreatic secretion , there has been only one previous report of the effects of a centrally acting peptide on biliary secretion . |
18 | We have maintained a high level of marketing activity in the traditional areas of our work with the result that we brought in a greater value of tender enquiries in 1992 than we did in the previous year , and this we achieved against the backcloth of a continually reducing market . |
19 | Unfortunately , the coverage in England is not as widespread as we would like , leaving many areas without the benefit of a formally functioning Association . |
20 | In the case of modularity , there seems a natural explication if we take seriously Minsky 's idea of a highest organizing module . |
21 | What we can say , though , is that the picture which emerges from these is not of a monolithic bloc but of a constantly mutating organism made up of elements which are symbiotic and mutually contradictory at the same time ( see , for example , Sanjek 1988 ; Hirsch 1969 ; Peterson and Berger 1971 ; Hardy n.d. ; Frith 1978 ; 1983a ; 1988a ) . |
22 | Grouped by region , date and school , the casts were displayed in the palais du Trocadero built for the 1878 Exposition Universelle and expanded in the 1930s as part of a constantly evolving display . |
23 | This verdict may be the last attempt of this generation to keep intact the myth of a unanimously resisting France , for it is now under review by the Court of Cassation . |
24 | Any published note on the subject at the moment can only be a snapshot of a rapidly moving situation ; the applications can be classified but the individuality and absence of repetition of R&D projects would make detailed descriptions of specific applications of very narrow interest . |
25 | This was clear to Leibniz but not at all to Kant , although Leibniz , not surprisingly , found it difficult to provide a satisfactory clarification of the conditions of intelligibility of the idea of existential uniqueness , or explain why should there not be duplicate universes , and was finally reduced to appealing to the idea of a rationally acting God . |
26 | Finally , while Chomsky assumed that without a priori knowledge , a distributional analysis of a naturally occurring language sample would inevitably fail to identify correspondences between words and their respective lexical roles , more recent studies have suggested that this view may have been unduly pessimistic ( Maratsos 1983 ) . |
27 | ’ Typically , Morrissey seems to cherish the very constraints and despondency of a now disappearing England , fetishize the lost limits . |
28 | In eukaryotes , in contrast , recombination is usually confined to members of a sexually reproducing species , although there are some facts that suggest that distant gene transfer is not wholly absent . |
29 | And secondly the idea that the cells of a sexually reproducing body cooperate with each other only because meiosis is scrupulously fair . |
30 | The government 's ambitious reforms aiming at the revitalization of the national economy and the introduction of a fully operating free-market mechanism , outlined by Antall in May 1990 [ see p. 37465 ] , incorporated privatization , together with efforts to increase exports , to enter the world economy and to attract foreign investment . |