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

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1 Figure 4.10 shows a bar.code for a book and for a pupil .
2 Figure 8.4 shows a radar beam travelling from Earth ( E ) to Venus ( V ) and passing a distance b from the sun .
3 Figure 5.12 shows a part of the image in Figure 5.3(a) magnified by a factor of 4 .
4 This trend has been even more marked for rural areas ; figure 6.1 shows a decline of some 29 per cent in passenger journeys by rural buses between 1965 and 1975 .
5 Figure 2 shows a compilation of age determinations indicating times of high lake levels for the Kenya rift valley in comparison with results from the present study .
6 Figure 2 shows a design where both the background and the second colour are changed periodically and Sample 2 shows a section of knitted fabric created in Norwegian jacquard .
7 Figure 24.6 shows a sequence of photographs of an oscilloscope screen , on which the current through the circuit is displayed in the y-direction versus the voltage across it in the x-direction .
8 Figure 4.4 shows a print-out for a search by pupil name and by author .
9 Figure 3.11 shows a dawg for the words stable , stabbed , stole , stolen , stable and dabbed .
10 So , figure 2.1 shows a situation which is sufficient for there to be a natural monopoly , but it is not in fact necessary .
11 Figure 6.8 shows a reproduction of a concept map developed by second-year pupils ( aged 12-13 ) as part of their Alternative Ideologies unit work .
12 Figure 5.1 shows a print-out of records from a file in the medieval village database .
13 Figure 5.1 shows a section through this device .
14 By way of example , Figure 7 shows a system that I have been helping to develop for some ten years now ( Smith and Rothman , 1980 ) .
15 Figure 4.1 shows a scheme of the metabolism of lipoproteins and the important regulatory enzymes .
16 Figure 3.6 shows a trie representation of the above lexicon , figure 3.7 shows the dawg , and figure 3.8 shows a dawg represented as a finite state recogniser of the same lexicon .
17 Figure 6.26 shows a wireframe drawing of a double sheaved , ball bearing pulley block as designed on a conventional three-dimensional CAD system .
18 Figure 7.9 shows a printout from one page of the database which other students found informative and very easy to use .
19 figure 4 shows a four-colour design made from our original design .
20 Figure 4 shows a comparison of the APGPR urine concentrations between the normal subjects and MO1 and MO3 emphasising the differing appearance of the immunoreactive signal between these two groups .
21 Figure 5.15 shows a control point being located on a magnified Landsat MSS image of Lakenheath USAF base in eastern England .
22 Figure 14.4 shows a number of entries concerned with ‘ land ’ and its variants and located at a variety of places in the main sequence .
23 Figure 4.9 shows a map produced on a standard line-printer by the SYMAP package .
24 Figure 4.9 shows a print-out of a reminder .
25 ( Note however , that Figure 5.2 shows a population increase of between 5 and 14.9 per cent for the same area between 1971 and 1981 ) .
26 Figure 6 shows a rabbit on the left , with these axes marked , two horizontal and the third vertical .
27 Figure 6 shows a graph and part of its cover .
28 Figure 10.5 shows a plan view of a large Michelson interferometer in which the three blocks carrying the mirrors M , M 1 , and M 2 are freely suspended .
29 Figure 3 shows a Data Flow Diagram ( DFD ) [ 22 ] for the trail management which indicates the control of events required in searching and navigating .
30 Figure 3 shows a comparison of pitted erythrocyte counts in the current drinkers compared with the ‘ reformed ’ group .
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