Example sentences of "in [adj] [noun] it [be] " in BNC.

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1 In normal circumstances it is difficult to know the limits of one 's own capability , let alone those of the organization .
2 The old man explained his views on the matter afterwards to a Christian friend , ‘ For an ordinary man in normal circumstances it is enough that he believe faithfully in God .
3 Even in normal society it is boring and , after a while , meaningless to trace everything to a common source , especially when the detail is elaborate .
4 In strong syllables it is comparatively easy to distinguish from , from , but in weak syllables the difference is not so clear .
5 In strong wind it was as nimble as one might wish and had exceptional stability at the extreme sides of the wind window .
6 In professional practice it is the duty of the advocate to call the attention of the court to all decisions that are in any way against the submissions he makes ; but this may not be possible in moot conditions .
7 In broad terms it was found that British managements had adopted a control system which relied little upon direct managerial intervention and allowed the workforce a greater say in decision-making , essentially as a recognition of the de facto power of trade unions and shopfloor organisation within the industry .
8 Thirdly , in economic theory it is presumed that any level of output is always produced at the lowest technically feasible cost .
9 To a certain extent this made economic and political sense : in economic terms it is where the council had most leverage and control , and in political terms it represented a move to a new base , one built on the strength of the white-collar and public sector unions in the changing economy and society of Sheffield .
10 Since jealousy has its roots in emotional insecurity it is these feelings , so often experienced but not recognised , that you must try to treat with sympathy and imagination ; remembering that you , one day , may feel just as your mother-in-law does .
11 In entrenched provisions it was established that a new roll of African voters ( the African higher roll ) would be created with the same qualifications as those for the European roll , i.e. either an income of 1,800 Rhodesian dollars per annum or ownership of property valued at not less than $3,600 , or , an income of $1,200 per annum or ownership of property valued at not less than $2,400 and four years of secondary education .
12 In each case it is the lack of understanding which constitutes the inauthenticity of either the faith or the doubt .
13 In each case it is elderly people living alone who obtain the most support from the state , and among them men receive slightly more than women .
14 In each case it is the woman and her conduct that the man 's lawyers will try to put on trial .
15 In each case it is submitted that the sentences have to be quashed because there was unreasonable delay in giving the appellant a copy of the committal order , which in each case contained particulars of the facts found as constituting a contempt of court .
16 In each case it is evident that physical geographers had to become conversant with progress in related disciplines and a number of excellent papers in Progress in Physical Geography ( 1977- ) provide reports reflecting progress in other disciplines .
17 Although all the filter networks treated so far in this chapter cause phase shift , in each case it is accompanied by attenuation .
18 In each case it is the revised versions which are to be played in this concert .
19 In each case it was he who sent ‘ the flying prince ’ away , beside making another try and dropping a goal in England 's sensational 13–0 victory .
20 The actual form of organisation adopted was by no means standardised but in each case it was subject to direct political control [ Chester , 1975 ] .
21 We found that in each case it was necessary to think of three dimensions .
22 In each case it was a duty which was imposed on the judges in their capacity as judges of the superior courts and related to the administration of justice in those courts .
23 There 's some in Nottingham , in one of the mus museum , that has the Nottingham coat of arms , I think it has the council house and various things , and it 's all done mechanically on a huge machine that er is a repetition in each bay It 's probably thirty , forty foot long , but in each bay of about seven foot it 's separate curtain .
24 In agricultural history it is evident that a macro-economic overview is necessarily limited because we have no usable index of agricultural rent over any considerable period .
25 In political terms it was a sensible alliance for a fifteen-year-old heiress deprived of a father 's or an uncle 's protection .
26 It 's probably right but it does n't actually count in that calculation it 's something quite separate .
27 In that instant it was as if some dam erected long ago around his heart had been breached .
28 In that sense it is very much a virgin field .
29 In that sense it is , like Dennett 's , a picture-cum-flow-chart view , rather than one in terms of processes .
30 In that sense it is quite a deterministic theory .
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