Example sentences of "in those [adj] [noun] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 In those Whig-dominated years he found that England was preponderantly not Whig but Tory ; he found that a corruption-wielding establishment could win elections only in the , numerically preponderant , boroughs and even then only at the cost of an enormously expensive patronage machine .
2 In those early days what seemed newsworthy was what was called the movie ‘ fever ’ .
3 In those early days we were a real sub-Faces band , all Gibson guitars and plonking bass lines .
4 In those early days they were expected to go to chapel every morning ; bells seemed to announce every change in the timetable .
5 It was the friendship that developed in those early days which added to the success of Jan 's casting .
6 And in those early days he was careful with money .
7 In those early days he was n't very relaxed with them . ’
8 In those early days it seemed the sky was the limit !
9 In those early days I did n't even stop to think how Derrick felt , ’ she admits .
10 I do n't know whether other newly married men feel the same , but in those early days I was aware ofa calm satisfaction and fulfilment .
11 In those early months he had wanted her to know the magnitude of what he had done and that he had done it for her .
12 In those dispiriting circumstances it comes as no surprise to find politicians trying to offer a means of escaping from the encircling gloom .
13 In those dark days I was that uncomfortable mixture of martyr and guilty inadequate , which made me alternate between the guilt of holding people back and the fury that they did n't offer to stop without being asked .
14 Some will also have provided a range of facilities for those officials and private individuals travelling along the highways , which would have been an important element in those small towns which housed a mansio or , to a lesser extent , a mutatio , though there is surprisingly little evidence to demonstrate this .
15 Authenticity is evident in those small details which come only from experience , particularly in the moments of rest in between the assaults .
16 Thus , from 1930–31 , the District 's providing powers in Bedfordshire were limited to urban areas and the Cambridge Board assumed Chapter III powers in those rural areas which had been included in Shearman 's territory between 1927–30 .
17 Nowhere is this more apparent than where access to farmland is most easily accomplished and is least organized — in those rural areas which abut directly on to the main centres of the population : the so-called ‘ urban fringe ’ .
18 In spite of the fact that Champion ( 1981 , 20 ) has argued that ‘ some of the most spectacular changes have occurred in those rural areas which are relatively remote from traditional metropolitan influences ’ it must also be remembered that the extra numbers in the remote areas are relatively modest , compared with those in the outer margins of the main centres of population , as shown in Figure 5.3 , and that most of the population growth has been strongly associated with smaller towns and accessible settlements in the countryside both in England ( OPCS , 1981b ) and Ireland ( Duffy , 1983 ) .
19 It concludes that damaging levels of sulphur are deposited on 75 per cent of all European forestry , with the most severe impact occurring in those eastern countries which were once communist .
20 All those sublime thoughts , which tower above the clouds , and reach as high as Heaven itself , take their rise and footing here : in all that great extent wherein the mind wanders , in those remote speculations it may seem to be elevated with , it stirs not one jot beyond those ideas , which Sense or Reflection , have offered .
21 What we 're interested in is how Dick ( Best ) can blend in those new players who will start to come through this year ’ .
22 It is essential that RBGE continues to co-operate with these bodies , and that we are represented at a high level in those international bodies which are active in taxonomic database work
23 At every point in those historic struggles which founded the Protestant and radical traditions in Europe , and which severed radicalism from the body of the Catholic Church , the struggle was as much for personal gain or for political or economic dominance as it was for any pure-hearted vision of goodness .
24 She believed what she had said and yet those last words had a curious prophetic ring — as if somewhere in those uncharted seas which man calls Time , they were echoing and re-echoing into the future .
25 Coleman 's introductory lecture began late in November , and students had to stay in London in the heat of the following summer , when in those pre-formalin days they cut up carcasses at some hazard to their health .
26 And as for monks in those silent orders they must be in a state of hysteria all the time .
27 And in those fat books you 're always reading , with busty ladies on the cover .
28 For instance , planners might attempt to estimate the probability of the following : further significant increases/decreases in the price of crude oil ; increases in the number of terrorist attacks on civilian airliners in those Mediterranean countries which have large tourist trades ; the likelihood of political change in South Africa , and the chances of continuing economic stability in that country .
29 Similarly in those nationalised industries which are monopolies , the EFL may be met simply by raising prices .
30 In those hard times she turned to the god in the village where she lived , and that god stood by her .
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