Example sentences of "in [adj] [noun pl] [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 In normal circumstances I would have written this information off as being about the small Green Swords which come from the Rio Sarabia , but in this case I could not , as the fish concerned had been supplied from Dr Kallman 's laboratory and were correctly named .
2 In normal circumstances it is difficult to know the limits of one 's own capability , let alone those of the organization .
3 The old man explained his views on the matter afterwards to a Christian friend , ‘ For an ordinary man in normal circumstances it is enough that he believe faithfully in God .
4 In normal circumstances you would know this or be able to find it out , but this is still only a short case study and we have n't included it .
5 Wycliffe felt sure that in normal circumstances she was a cheerful woman , more ready to laugh than cry .
6 The irony was that in normal circumstances she would have insisted on seeing a working installation of a new product if only to satisfy herself that whatever she wrote would n't infringe the Trades Descriptions Act .
7 ‘ I ask you to believe that in normal circumstances he would not behave like that , but he is still not quite himself … the death of his friend , you know … ’
8 In normal spirits he seemed to need only two steps to cross a room .
9 Pseudoephedrine ( see p 317 ) can produce euphoria and delusions , if taken in very large doses , and even in normal doses it may cause nightmares and behavioural problems in children .
10 The obvious comparison is with housework : if women want to eat and live in pleasant surroundings they have to cook and clean .
11 It could be argued that anyone who is idiot enough to send a cheque for thousands of pounds to a salesman of shares in unquoted companies he has never heard of deserves to lose it all .
12 In strong winds we do n't want beginners to be overpowered and so we reduce the sail area , that 's known as reefing .
13 In strong syllables it is comparatively easy to distinguish from , from , but in weak syllables the difference is not so clear .
14 In monetary terms it made a lot more sense to extend episode numbers within a serial , thereby getting more television hours with fewer changes in location .
15 Although this factor may be difficult to assess in monetary terms it may be influential in the make or buy decision .
16 We then all sit down together and discuss these various options over and over again until the board has reached a position of understanding of where in broad terms we think the strategy of the individual business should fit .
17 I think in broad terms we can say that er , Les Echo comparatively did better than the F T.
18 In broad terms it was found that British managements had adopted a control system which relied little upon direct managerial intervention and allowed the workforce a greater say in decision-making , essentially as a recognition of the de facto power of trade unions and shopfloor organisation within the industry .
19 In broad terms it may be stated as being whether an original tenant under a lease containing a rent review clause is bound by privity of contract to pay the landlord for the time being of the premises a rent agreed or otherwise determined with a subsequent assignee of the term .
20 In broad Scots he asked Selkirk for his authority , the soldier flourished a piece of parchment and told him to hurry .
21 People have been scrambling up Cust 's Gully for over 100 years , and in dry conditions it should pose no problems — although it is not particularly attractive and I only included it because it was such a traditional route .
22 Under permanently wet conditions , small mammal bone becomes soft and easily broken , and it has been found that small mammal bones preserved in wet caves become extensively broken , whereas in dry caves they are better preserved , but other factors may also modify such an assemblage .
23 In particular if the meeting is in private premises it should be noted that the police can insist on entering the premises even against the wishes of the organisers , if they have reasonable grounds to believe a breach of the peace is likely to occur ( Thomas v. Sawkins ( H.C. , 1935 ) ) .
24 After being educated in private schools he was apprenticed to a mechanical engineer , and before the age of twenty-one had attained a position of responsibility in the works .
25 In economic terms they seem to have had little effect : in Merseyside , for instance , which has had every new scheme , economic decline has not even been halted , let alone reversed .
26 IIb : in economic terms they are qualitatively different .
27 To a certain extent this made economic and political sense : in economic terms it is where the council had most leverage and control , and in political terms it represented a move to a new base , one built on the strength of the white-collar and public sector unions in the changing economy and society of Sheffield .
28 Now , there are good reasons why we might want to do that , but in economic terms you 'll reduce the net welfare of the economy , or the world simply because you 're diverting resources away from efficient modes of production into inefficient modes of production .
29 In technical terms we say that Socinus rejected the ‘ forensic ’ idea of salvation .
30 In memorable phrases he spoke of things being ‘ changed utterly ’ as a ‘ terrible beauty ’ was born .
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