Example sentences of "in [noun] [noun pl] [pers pn] [vb mod] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Yes , but C and G are actually very good er very sound er on their er ratios , they 're pretty good , but erm some of them are n't so good , and you know , be careful when you 're coming to invest in building societies I 'd stick to the major players at the moment , even though you may get a premium by going to a smaller society .
2 Okay , it starts so what we 're talking there in text books you 'll find they define groups in terms of their structure and their composition and they 're the sorts of things that they usually pick out Okay , there 's a lot of work then on interaction in groups .
3 One of the features of that day will be a series of mini- lecturers on just about every conceivable subject , and during the next few Ideas In Action programmes I shall be talking to some of the lecturers about their topics , hopefully whetting your appetites sufficiently to want to join us on that day to hear more .
4 Looking further ahead to the mid-1990s , the [ Mt does not expect the three big economies ' external imbalances to change as a percentage of GNP — in dollar terms they will rise-assuming economic policies and exchange rates stay the same .
5 This will also entitle you to book in advance and take part in ant activities you can play individually , at an additional charge per session , enrol in a coaching group or join one of our many resident clubs .
6 Nostalgia tends to be an acute instinct in most sportsmen : in rugby players it can be positively overwhelming .
7 When a company 's land bank is shown at cost and its true value is not reflected in share prices it may , of course , be ripe for a takeover bid .
8 While the Chamber of Commerce is busily advertising in UK newspapers it will not be promoting a firm on the Calais industrial estate who are busily buying direct from European breweries and reselling in Britain .
9 As with all Cirrhilabrus species , scottorum is principally a zooplankton feeder in the wild , and may be seen rising up in aggregations , composed mainly of females and juveniles , from the bottom to a metre or more when actively feeding , but in aquarium conditions it will take a variety of foods and readily adapt to a regular feeding programme .
10 By that time the shipping company had accumulated substantial reserves of cash , and as the offer was in Ingard shares I could understand the attraction of the deal to Desmond Ingard .
11 When portraying factory scenes for advertisements in trade journals he would adopt a more straightforward , demotic style .
12 And they 'll they 'll anybody new in the estate agent in sta in staff terms they 'll let them look at that and say well that 's what Lynda 's here er sorry I beg your pardon
13 Robert Taylor , to whose seminal text Value-added processes in information Systems we shall need to return , provides a similar perspective : Executives or managers , especially those who are policy makers , have information requirements that can be characterized as follows :
14 Then of course all the money that you were paying , wo n't be paying in bank charges you 'll be paying off .. your debt ?
15 However , in county schools it must now be ‘ wholly or mainly of a broadly Christian character ’ , reflecting ‘ the broad traditions of Christian belief without being distinctive of any particular Christian denomination ’ .
16 In City terms he could claim some credit , along with Peter Walker , as the father of modern unit trusts , while he made a personal profit of £1 million from the sale of Cannon Insurance , the UK vehicle of the disgraced Bernie Cornfeld .
17 Hobnobbing in TV circles he may even get to meet Richard Briars and solve a mystery that 's plagued him for years : Those voice-overs he does for ads on the telly , he always sounds so out of breath .
18 Certainly , by engaging to the full in tutorial sessions you can identify the way in which he likes views to be put forward .
19 To the urban dweller , all woods look the same , but in landscape terms we must be careful to distinguish between the wildwood ( the remnant or successor of the natural or semi-natural woodland of Britain — which certainly does not exist anywhere today and probably has not since the Roman period ) and woods which have been to a greater or lesser degree managed for the production of timber and wood ( Fig. 63 ) .
20 pick it up cos it 's in speech marks I 'll put the speech marks back after it
  Next page