Example sentences of "[adj] [verb] the full [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 By building up a good soil structure and providing conditions where all the natural soil flora and fauna can thrive , it is possible to realize the full potential of any piece of land , and to grow on it vigorous , healthy crops and livestock .
2 You should comply with all reasonable management requests and be prepared to perform the full range of duties appropriate to your employment , ie not only your current duties ; but a wider range of duties required by the ES ( within daily travelling distance of your home for non-mobile employees and anywhere in the organisation if you are in a mobile grade .
3 But when the rebels , crammed into a fiery and heated meeting in Lord's ' hallowed Long Room heard that president Dennis Silk was not prepared to put the full weight of the MCC behind the protest letter , the meeting voted overwhelmingly by 108-3 to force the authorities to call the full meeting .
4 It follows that in the neo-classical model , firms will be willing to supply the full employment level of real income ( Y f ) at each price level — thus , the AS curve is vertical at Y f .
5 The historians of Judaism , or for that matter of Hellenism , are seldom prepared to admit the full extent of our ignorance , which is only partly due to the paucity and contradictions of the evidence .
6 Substantial investments in distribution systems or overseas plants may be the only means of overcoming barriers which otherwise would make it impossible to reap the full returns from a given technical process .
7 The main problem , according to the audit office , is that there is no clear link between the commission 's production plans and actual production , making it impossible to identify the full extent of variations between planned , programmed , and actual forest areas supplying timber .
8 Although it is too early to assess the full effects , some of the rich shellfish and oyster beds offshore are thought to be in some danger .
9 It 's too early to assess the full extent of the damage .
10 If the Government were likely to meet the full cost , the proposal would be unnecessary .
11 The opportunities opened up by the technical innovations are so large and exciting that it is hard to grasp the full extent of the change .
12 Coffin thought he would be glad to have the full postmortem results on each body to know exactly how much poison was inside each stomach .
13 The current holder of the bill will present it for payment and all being well receive the full value .
14 A proposal by Milosevic that the congress should continue without the Slovene delegation was rejected , and in the early hours of Jan. 23 Pancevski finally declared that the session , which had been due to adopt the full congress declaration and resolutions on the congress debate , as well as elect a new party leadership , had been adjourned .
15 SSRs can also be used to describe the problem more clearly and in more detail , which is necessary because the originator of an SPR may not have been able to indicate the full extent of the problem or how it applies to other users .
16 SSRs can also be used to describe the problem more clearly and in more detail , which is necessary because the originator of an SPR may not have been able to indicate the full extent of the problem or how it applies to other users .
17 As in many foods , the fat in cheese contains much of the flavour and it is , therefore , a real breakthrough to be able to create the full flavour of a traditional blue cheese with less than half of the normal fat content .
18 They returned to Tunbridge Wells via Cheltenham , where Lulu Harrington gave them tea and her fulsome apologies for being unable to remember the full name and address on Beatrix 's fourth letter .
19 In this way , the firms will be unlikely to reap the full benefits of their equipment . ’
20 Would you find that something you wanted , that you were able to experience the full range of emotions ?
21 Those who can walk , but only with difficulty , will not be able to walk the full length of High Row . ’
22 Independent producers , from whom the Government expects both ITV and BBC to take one quarter of their programmes , regularly complain that the broadcasters , like building societies , are reluctant to advance the full cost of a project .
23 It is important to retain the full range of provisional classification of institutions and types of relations , as the means to specific analysis , rather than to work with the ( pre-sociological ) formulas of ‘ the artist ’ and ‘ his public ’ , or ‘ the cultural superstructure ’ and ‘ the economic base ’ .
24 It was not until 1965 that I was able to do the full course and fly the Boeing 707 .
25 However , it is important to recall the full list , in order to emphasize the factors that did not influence perceptions .
26 But I think it is important to keep the full committee abreast of the activities of the sub-committee .
27 Sir Geoffrey Howe , leader of the House of Commons , last night denied MPs would be exempt from paying poll tax on second homes — but agreed they would be able to reclaim the full cost from allowances .
28 The policy behind section 6 of the Sexual Offences Act is presumably that Parliament considered that a girl under 16 is generally unlikely to be sufficiently mature to realise the full implications of sexual intercourse ; so that her protection demands that a belief by a man under the age of 24 that she herself was over the age of 16 should not be only an honest but also a reasonable belief . ’
29 In 1966 rate rebates were introduced for those householders unable to pay the full amount and by 1977/8 rebates went to 15 per cent of all households in England and Wales .
30 Often students with babies or young children are not able to pay the full cost of a place at a crèche , so usually alternative funding is required .
  Next page