Example sentences of "in their [adj] [noun sg] [pers pn] " in BNC.
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1 | In their metaphorical indiscipline they had gained ‘ new status ’ and slipped across a boundary into marginality , for as Foucault ( 1977 : 25 ) has suggested , the idea of discipline revolves around control of the physical body and ‘ proceeds from the distribution of individuals in space … it is always the body that is at issue — the body and its forces , their utility and their docility , their distribution and their punishment ’ . |
2 | As I gained confidence in their genuine goodwill I found that my sense of humour returned and I enjoyed making them laugh . |
3 | In their headlong rush they naturally tend to get their corners knocked off at each bounce , so they end up as peculiarly smooth , rounded lumps , the smoothness being the result of mechanical abrasion . |
4 | As all these , including buddleia , flower in their second year they soon supply more seeds to the young sward . |
5 | In their second match they beat Northern Transvaals target of 222 for 2 , thanks to a second wicket partnership by Curtis and Weston . |
6 | In their pure form they have neither corporate nor competitive strategies as defined above . |
7 | In their personal freedom I would n't say they are free like English girls but they are up to a point . |
8 | However , since inflation was well established in people 's expectations and was therefore reflected in their price-setting behaviour it was thought that a sudden reduction in monetary growth might cause demand to fall short of nominal output and cause a rise in unemployment . |
9 | Indeed , for all but those organisations which know precisely how much additional manpower they need and for how long , in their simple form they are a particularly unsuitable means of employing temporary workers . |
10 | He usually persuaded rather than forced , and her mother simply battered down any opposition with her tongue ; but they could do it , and in their present temper they would . |
11 | Partnerships in the UK are a contemporary feature ; in their present incarnation they date from the mid 1980s and since then have grown remarkably into a national phenomenon . |
12 | It is exactly the same tension that made The Smiths a success , and in their low-key way I suspect that Felt will keep some of the same cult appeal now they are gone . |
13 | In the dithyramb , but only in the dithyramb , the chorus are oblivious of everyday existence : in their ecstatic state they identify entirely with their proto-dramatic part . |
14 | Repetition is something many students avoid at all costs , and in their early music they tend not to repeat a single bar in an entire composition . |
15 | There are considerable differences over the interpretation of the three methodological practices , but in their general form they are common currency amongst Marxists . |
16 | This enquiry found that the airship trials had been unsatisfactory and in their final report they stated that ‘ … no Government department , high official or group of individuals was held to be responsible ’ . |
17 | In their final game they defied normal logic and won the hardest game in their section by defeating the much fancied Holland , courtesy of a piece of outstanding arrogance by the diminutive midfield dynamo Archie Gemmill . |
18 | In their final declaration they undertook " to democratize further our societies and consolidate democratic institutions in our countries " . |
19 | In their entwined sleep they exchanged arms and legs |
20 | In their national survey they found that : |
21 | On talking to parents , we were told that had there been a suitable provision in their own country they would not be in Budapest . |
22 | At the highest level of society there were the names given to the great tenants-in-chief who held their estates directly of the Conqueror , and it must be remembered that if these magnates were already powerful in their own country they may even have brought locative bynames with them , as was the case of William de Moyon already mentioned . |
23 | Leicester have got so many men back in their own half he 'll do well to make anything of this Collimore . |
24 | Many of the older folk if you get them really going in their own dialect you can just say roughly where they come from . |
25 | In their own way they were the spiritual precursors of Mrs Thatcher 's ‘ Star Chamber ’ . |
26 | While the Danzig Poles were not keen for the city to come under Polish rule , they were nevertheless determined that they should not be penalised for being Polish , and in their own way they were proud of their identity — even if it did not quite amount to ‘ nationality ’ in a conventional sense . |
27 | In their own way they all felt the same . |
28 | And because they did not consider themselves sinners therefore in their own understanding they were not lost . |
29 | And some of them are good fun pop in their own right they just happen to be done in a foreign language and with different cultural influences . |
30 | In their own time they were often called ‘ Condition of England Novels ’ , because they addressed themselves directly to the state of the nation . |