Example sentences of "and [adv] [verb] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The big Christmas , big Christmas card company , erm , and it is big , er , is American , and wholly owned American , and that 's not , but they did n't build a factory , they took one over that 's already ,
2 Unlike the Barometer , who is largely faithful and wholly site tenacious , The Earthquake puts out all over town .
3 What we really need is more green spaces in cities , adequate public transport , traffic-free town centres and vastly improved public cleaning services to make our cities the thriving centres they could be .
4 High living standards had encouraged migration to these republics from other parts of the USSR , and this became one of the issues most central to the development of a powerful and widely supported nationalist movement in the late 1980s , particularly since the Baltic nations were relatively few in number and tended to have low birth and high divorce rates ( in Latvia , where golden and silver wedding anniversaries had formerly been celebrated , there were ceremonies in the 1980s for couples that had been together for just a few years ) .
5 To take a specific example , the statement that a direct consequence of a publicly announced and widely believed monetary policy which aims at holding the unemployment rate at U 1 will be a higher expected rate of inflation does not imply the more extreme view that monetary policy can only reduce unemployment below U * ; to the extent that the authorities increase the money supply at a rate in excess of what was generally anticipated .
6 From this modest start in 1905 the publication developed into a highly respected and widely read quarterly magazine which Ayliffe edited and to which he contributed until 1947 .
7 Harold P. Ford , a long-serving and widely respected former CIA analyst , portrayed Gates as a self-serving careerist who curried favour with his superiors and did not manifest the necessary independence of judgment .
8 Pride of place in this endeavour was given to systematic and properly grounded empirical investigation .
9 One respondent was not alone in pleading for ‘ a properly funded and functioning court system and properly paid legal aid ’ .
10 It says officers did not ’ pursue and properly explore all avenues of inquiry ’
11 you 're talking round and you 've suddenly become a convert to the private site because it 's the only way that you can find that your party can oppose the establishment of proper and properly managed gipsy sites in Oxfordshire .
12 Last year 's crop of court cases at the Old Bailey reported in national newspapers included : a French master who had a store of pornographic photos of teenage pupils dating back ten years ; a religious education master who simulated sexual intercourse in front of his pupils ( the Old Bailey heard he had done this little party trick dozens of times at different schools ) ; a primary school teacher who was allowed to go on teaching after being found guilty of ‘ lewd , indecent and libidinous practices ’ against ten- and 11-year old boys ; and a music teacher in Sussex who had raped , attempted to rape and indecently assaulted hundreds of girls over many years .
13 Two weeks ago the same Dr Courtney was convicted of raping two women and indecently assaulting two others .
14 Evil charmer Thomas Courtney , 46 , was found guilty yesterday of drugging and raping two women and indecently assaulting two others .
15 A week later Michael Musgrove , 21 , was jailed for 13 years for raping three women and indecently assaulting two others .
16 It saw two crucial and intimately connected social changes gather irresistible momentum : the creation of a new stratum of service landholders — the pomeshchiki and the subsequent enserfment not only of those peasants already suffering de facto bondage , but of the entire Russian peasantry .
17 Despite disagreement over the extent of providential intervention in the flow of human events evangelicals had no doubt that ‘ there is a God who governs the world and intimately directs all the concerns of his rational and immortal creatures ’ .
18 His many enthusiasms extended to owning a couple of elderly Rolls-Royces , attempting to restart a School of Architecture at the RA , submitting with success his own drawings to the Summer Exhibition and vigorously supporting home-town local causes , including the Malvern Arts Club .
19 In both books we find him passionately concerned with the nature of time and vigorously rejecting cyclical theories of history .
20 As a result of the sterling area policy , Britain not only failed to deliver the goods but actively and blatantly exploited colonial producers .
21 By adopting this methodical approach you should avoid the pitfalls and successfully answer any questions set on this subject .
22 can not be denied , but it would seem that man 's instinctive awareness of his mastery of his own destiny , is influenced by an equally instinctive awareness that he can not peacefully and successfully control that destiny unless he can locate , or himself create some supreme form of guiding influence which is recognised by all .
23 Fred Crocombe put the flaps half down , and Wood flattened out and made a fine three-point landing , pulling up quickly and successfully avoiding several groups of boulders .
24 Called at different times Dai Nam — The Great South — and Dai Viet — Country of the Great Viet People — they repulsed an invasion by Mongol hordes and successfully resisted new attempts by the Sung , Ming and Manchu emperors of China to reconquer them .
25 So we are faced with the amazing fact that neither the insistence on English superiority nor a savage level of English military aggression was enough to produce widespread , let alone total , resistance by a people who for well over two centuries had determinedly and successfully resisted both .
26 The Trolls now test to regenerate and successfully regenerate 3 wounds .
27 The police rapidly destroyed the remnants of the ‘ People 's Will ’ and successfully contained underground activity during the rest of the 1880s .
28 Some had a clear idea of what was required and successfully moved that
29 She waited thus for what she judged to be half an hour , moving a few steps to and fro to keep warm whenever the coast was clear .
30 Much more controversially , it may also be a contempt to ‘ scandalise the court ’ and thereby undermine public confidence in the integrity of the judiciary .
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