Example sentences of "[coord] [noun] [prep] the whole " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 This is the father of all perfection , or consummation of the whole world .
2 The picture also served as a useful summary or overview of the whole EPH situation , reflecting its position in the surrounding community , liaison links with social workers and relatives of the clients , and its relationship with the area office and the department headquarters .
3 It was a delicate , sensitive job ; one upon which the success or failure of the whole attack depended .
4 Talking can often get us out of sticky situations : talking sense to somebody , calming an explosive situation , giving the person a chance to back off without losing pride , or even pointing out the consequences or pointlessness of the whole exercise .
5 The final step provides an evaluation or post-mortem of the whole teaching programme so that , in cases where students have not achieved the objectives , appropriately modified plans can be made for future teaching .
6 There was n't any kind of conflict or argument throughout the whole time of our assembly .
7 It must be emphasized that relatives remoter than parents , or brothers or sisters of the whole blood , and children of such brothers and sisters deceased , can succeed to no part whatever of the estate , if there is a surviving spouse .
8 Several people felt that this figure could determine their acceptance or rejection of the whole scheme .
9 She had not thought of Moorlake or Jenny for the whole morning .
10 It might be ( and indeed I think it would be ) an improvement in our law , if a release or acquittance of the whole debt , on payment of any sum which the creditor might be content to receive by way of accord and satisfaction ( though less than the whole ) , were held to be , generally , binding , though not under seal ; nor should I be unwilling to see equal force given to a prospective agreement , like the present , in writing though not under seal ; but I think it impossible , without refinements which practically alter the sense of the word , to treat such a release or acquittance as supported by any new consideration proceeding from the debtor .
11 There was n't any huge promotion or hype about the whole workwear thing as some people are suggesting , because it was all about a few people picking up on it and then promoting it off their own back .
12 The Secretaries of State believe that the internal processes of reporting , recording and discussion between teacher and pupil should cover a pupil 's progress and activities across the whole educational programme of the school , both in the classroom and outside , and possibly activities outside the school as well .
13 The features on the masks can vary in size between 10 and 0.2mm with the whole mask measuring up to 400 by 500mm .
14 The course aims to prepare students for quite specific kinds of work in school , and yet must acknowledge the relevance of language use and function in the whole junior school curriculum .
15 Fr Bernard 's years as an assistant priest were marked by enthusiasm and expertise over the whole range of his work , not least in the Scout Movement — finally as Assistant Commissioner — and in the schools and at Endsleigh Convent and College .
16 The court must , of course , be satisfied as to the liability of each of the defendants against whom the order is made and payment of the whole award by one defendant will relieve the others of their liability .
17 To write a really successful ‘ introduction ’ to a subject like modern international law , demands a quite unusually catholic and thorough knowledge and experience of the whole subject .
18 The aim of this Council was putatively to ‘ represent the opinions , ideas and experience of the whole country to the broadcasting authorities ’ .
19 The framework in which political scientists usually consider these aspects of politics , employing the notions of ‘ political culture ’ and ‘ political socialization ’ , is too narrow to encompass all the relevant phenomena , and it is more fruitful , I think , to start from the conception of ‘ cultural reproduction ’ ( Bourdieu and Passeron , 1977 ) , which has the great merit of emphasizing that the ideas and values shaping political action are not necessarily expressed in an overtly political form , and of relating such ideas and values to the whole social structure .
20 Of course , it is part and parcel of the whole decision of the justices .
21 Bewilderingly Deep and Meaningfull — Derek was the eyes and mind of the whole project .
22 How then could we ever understand the nature and functioning of the whole belt ?
23 William of Jumièges says that Cnut married her after having her brought from the city before the siege ended and giving her weight in gold and silver before the whole army , but his chronology here is suspect , as he places the battle of Auxendunum ( presumably Assandun , 18 October ) before Æthelred 's death on 23 April , and the more contemporary Chronicle date of mid-1017 for the marriage is preferable .
24 To-day we can see Pakistani or Bengali women , walking in their traditional clothes , barely able to understand the language of the country in which they are living , acting as the repository for the pain and grief of the whole family .
25 Vowels are recognized most effectively as part of the pattern and rhythm of the whole sentence .
26 There is more money to be made by trying to increase the efficiency and flexibility of the whole system than there is through having a series of adversarial breaks in the chain .
27 In this sense , the placement in industry will not be viewed as an end in itself but as an essential ingredient in the process of change with the quality of the outcome being dependent on the design and management of the whole process .
28 They marked a momentous turning point in the market structure , operation , and management of the whole UK financial sector .
29 Written between 1599 and 1605 , it describes the religious exercises and prayers for the whole household as well as the private prayers and readings which occupied a large part of each day , and in which Lady Hoby was guided by her chaplain , Richard Rhodes .
30 Drawing from his experience of Japan , Johnson ( 1984 : p. 8 ) considered that this ‘ means the initiation and co-ordination of governmental activities to leverage upward the productivity and competitiveness of the whole economy and of particular industries in it …
  Next page