Example sentences of "that set [adv prt] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Some members also believe that setting up a faculty would be tantamount to handing auditing on a plate to those critics of the profession who have called for auditing matters to be placed under independent control .
2 They point out that setting up a screening system that is as accurate as the UK one is very difficult .
3 A US company that set up a film importing subsidiary in South Korea was subjected to intensive intimidation , including the release of snakes into cinemas to deter cinema customers .
4 Attractions included a travelling funfair that set up every year on the field beside the factory 's private runway and a gigantic firework display during the evening .
5 BP was one of a consortium of international oil companies that set up an oil spill response base in Singapore .
6 Murray 's cross from the right in the 67th minute was precise and evaded everyone except McCoist , whose header was turned towards Dykstra 's right-hand post and was as finely judged as the ball that set up the chance .
7 Nor could jumpy Orrell cope with the efficiency of the steady , unflurried Pilgrim , the full-back , who kicked Wasps ' penalty goals besides putting in the delicate chip that set up the try for Oti .
8 The reason I started writing tunes was because I could n't find tunes that set up the kind of guitar playing I wanted to do as an improviser .
9 The nuts and bolts of the deal have been put together cleverly to comply with the 1982 Cable Act and with the specific terms of the 1984 consent decree from Judge Harold Greene that set up the Baby Bells .
10 The Mirror rang the London firm that set up the line , Cablecom Productions .
11 Staff need to be made aware of the indicators that trigger off their own prejudices — snotty noses , nose- and ear-rings , coloured hair , leather jackets , elaborate and expensive school uniforms , gum-chewing — all those things that set off an expectation of a certain kind of behaviour , regardless of the individual young person 's personality .
12 He was dressed in a dark suit , expensively tailored , and a plain white shirt and bright silk tie that set off the crisp , glossy blackness of his hair .
13 Thus , in June 1985 , the Commission published a White Paper that set out a programme and timetable for the adoption of 300 legislative proposals ( later reduced to 282 ) to achieve a single market .
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