Example sentences of "in [adj] [adj] [noun sg] we " in BNC.

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1 In present-day western society we have cultural goals of material success : plenty of money , a big house , flash cars , pretty girl/handsome boy , for example .
2 This true story of a young Ayrshire doctor starts in that vast country we know as Russia , 275 years ago , during the reign of Czar Peter the Great .
3 And in that one house we used to do thirty thousand or more — we 'll call it thirty thousand — in three hangings .
4 In that split second we came that close to loosing one of them .
5 In that trance-like state we drift apart , still staring , but when I turn aside it 's as if we snapped a silken cord .
6 In that short interval we managed to grab a couple of milk crates and a door that we found at the edge of a building site .
7 I mean I 've only got some figures here up to the twenty fourth of February , and in that particular week we sold about thirteen and a half thousand U K holidays , as against the week last year of about five and a half , so we 've obviously seen a fairly major growth in U K holidays , but , as I said , we spent about a hundred thousand pounds on promotion , so we 're very pleased with the uptake of business coming in .
8 In that different method we frame our question in the first instance as a question about corporate responsibility .
9 In this strange institution we did not even know all the people who worked in the same room as ourselves , as the action went on twenty-four hours a day , and we were on duty on varying shifts .
10 He pointed out : ‘ In this current year we are getting something like £4.5 million .
11 ‘ The British have a long history of being inventive and in this current climate we are being inundated with new ideas , ’ says Richard Paine , marketing director of Inventalink , one of Britain 's biggest agencies which sells the ideas to commercial companies .
12 In this hilarious fashion we left Auckland and made our way north through the imaginatively-named Northland .
13 In this modern world we must both see that people obey the law and also be compassionate .
14 In this final section we look at some examples .
15 In this final section we illuminate these very different theories and prescriptions through a series of case studies .
16 In this latter case we get to simples by a process of ‘ Abstraction ’ .
17 In this regional centre we have 15 schools and two colleges , but we have very limited supplies of paper and carbons for the year and there are no stencils .
18 In this first category we consider three main criticisms : ( a ) that the model developed in chapter 4 can not account for a major feature of all economies ; ( b ) that the model relies for all its results on very simple specifications of the aggregate supply and demand curves ; and ( c ) that even if one accepts the model as it stands governments might effectively stabilize the economy if they possess better information about the economy than the private sector , or indeed if different parts of the private sector possess different information .
19 In the meantime , in this first article we will look at what your rights as a purchaser are , what you can expect from goods purchased , how to resolve some irritating problems with items already purchased , and some tips for avoiding the aggro in the first place .
20 In this first example we see how a teacher is able to initiate a sorting activity following a child 's chance remark .
21 In this introductory chapter we need not complicate things too much ; it will do to simply identify the distinctive interests of each of these kinds of sociology — consensus theory , action theory and conflict theory — in turn .
22 Grant that in this new year we may know your presence , see your love at work , and live in the light of the vent which gives us joy forever — the coming of your Son , Jesus Christ our Lord .
23 In this one episode we find interconnections with race , class , colonialism , and ( cultural ) imperialism , and in ironic , domestic , tragically intricate ways : witness Gide finally capitulating to the class , racial , and cultural prejudices of his own culture , as voiced through his mother , who in turn speaks through her servant .
24 In this brief review we have shown that the monomer unit , , is the archetype of a whole new family of free radicals with highly unusual properties — low or negligible intermolecular attractions , photochemical isomerisation and novel ring trapping , and complexation reactions .
25 In this Olympic year we are making a major commitment to athletics . ’
26 In this next section we 'll examine how status games are played in interviews , meetings and presentations and on the telephone .
27 The most interesting regime is therefore 2 b 1.8 , where C clusters can grow in regions of D and also D clusters can grow in regions of C. As intuition might suggest , in this interesting regime we find chaotically varying spatial arrays , in which C and D both persist in shifting patterns .
28 And it 's been a jolly good roof I will say , it 's not let there 's never been no problems with it in even in this bad weather we 've had these last few years .
29 In this concluding section we will examine this strategy in more detail .
30 In this short piece we draw together the main themes which recur through the various contributions and which seem to us important .
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