Example sentences of "in [noun sg] [verb] [prep] [noun pl] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 In The Times , an anonymous critic wrote : ‘ Resourcefully fey and lyrically frivolous , the new ‘ diversion with music ’ at the Lyric , Hammersmith — Share My Lettuce erratically follows in more familiar ( and more varied ) idioms the new directions in revue signposted by Cranks
2 ‘ We now have no similar indexes ’ , writes Mushkin , ‘ of differences in income associated with gradations in health .
3 The next chapter by Ruth Gardner is devoted to consumers ' views and their involvement in decision making about services , policy and practice .
4 We realised that there could be some difficulties , and some apparent injustices might show up , but due to great consultative work put in by Councillors , and Mrs , often against great vilification and personal attack , many per problems were sorted out as they arose but we saw that i in April motions in amendments we see that it takes three full paragraphs of the amended motion to see that they deign to welcome initiatives which extend participation in decision making to schools , governors and parents .
5 The stresses of family life and difficulties in parenting lie in structures of disadvantage and social policies which reinforce inequalities .
6 Washington continues to challenge the scientific claim that global warming is in part caused by emissions of carbon dioxide .
7 An international problem for many years , inflation is in part fuelled by governments printing money simply to maintain standards of living — unfortunately this technique has led to the undermining of the future prospects of the very people it was supposed to help .
8 The sale of Vernons , generally viewed as a reflection of cash-flow difficulties at the time , can now be seen as yet another example of Sangster 's far-sightedness , in part encouraged by expectations of a national lottery in Britain .
9 The first is in part provided by banks in the form of overdrafts , that is , the company may , by agreement , write cheques for larger sums than it has on deposit .
10 The first is in part provided by banks in the form of overdrafts , that is , the company may , by agreement , write cheques for larger sums than it has on deposit .
11 In contrast to care of children , those who tend the very old have no unequivocal proof of their success in terms of a healthy developing body .
12 These possibilities exist because some of the meanings which human beings find in experience depend on symbols and can only be given symbolic expression .
13 Farming became a fashionable occupation among the aristocracy , who had enough influence in Parliament to pass through Bills of Enclosure .
14 Fourth , it seems that , as with parents and children , we need to be aware that there are likely to be quite wide fluctuations in support passing between siblings over the lifetime of each .
15 The extent to which this inter-generational equity is achieved in practice depends upon Assumptions 1 and 2 as well as upon the extent to which any pattern of principal repayments is capable of reflecting assets usage .
16 The power of the various European States was in practice estimated by commentators largely in the crude terms of the extent of territory each possessed .
17 Preference will be given to candidates with a record of achievement in research supported by publications .
18 It is customary in research to distinguish between sources of documents by classifying them : the two terms used are ‘ primary ’ and ‘ secondary ’ .
19 There is a need to tie together developments in revenue accounting with developments in capital and asset accounting to ensure that the impact of capital is properly accounted for .
20 A larger proportion of labour with continuous tenure means a significant rise in labour costs to firms , and over the past decade Japanese companies have either found ways of flattening the wage profile or have ‘ encouraged ’ labour transfers into subsidiaries or satellite firms .
21 Restructuring for the remainder of the 1990s , they say , is likely to require a reduction in labour costs through cutbacks in overtime and part-time working .
22 It is the case , for example , that there exist wide disparities in labour costs between nations in Europe .
23 A decade or three back , when most of us could visit most countries without a visa , there was little expectation that this would prove a high water mark and that restrictions would steadily increase , but we may not be able to assume that the freedom to dial direct to distant countries will continue to increase : Egypt has cut direct-dial telephone links with Pakistan , Afghanistan , Iraq , Sudan and Iran to make it harder for Moslem militant leaders in exile to communicate with groups at home and organise terrorist attacks , the Al-Akhbar newspaper reports ; it is still possible to call via an operator .
24 Cash limits will in future apply to fundholders and non-fundholders alike .
25 The debate which the Green Papers generated has been fully chronicled elsewhere ( Cownie , 1990 ; Donaldson , 1990b ) , but the response to the proposal that rights of audience should in future depend on certificates of competence in advocacy rather than membership of a particular branch of the profession met a predictably hostile response from the Bar and a response verging on the intemperate from the judges .
26 Fancy , gentlemen in velvet scrapping like ragamuffins !
27 Is it in effect equalises in terms of means , the people applying for housing so there is no need for a means test for potential tenants because they all have in housing terms , the same means , I I do you understand this , I mean it 's vitally important you understand this just to see why this motion is nonsensical .
28 CAMRA believes that many ‘ independent ’ retailers are in effect tied to brewers .
29 As already noted , these conditions could be so onerous that they in effect amount to obligations .
30 And it 's being put to you that not being it 's been put to you straight , you 're in effect lying about guns , that you had a shotgun .
  Next page