Example sentences of "by [adv] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Thus the operation of discretion by juvenile liaison officers is structured by much the same variables as with the section police : ‘ It all depends upon their attitude . ’
2 The thought that the country might attempt suicide once again , so soon and by much the same means as last time , is almost too painful to contemplate .
3 Secondly , and by much the same token , we would condemn any suggestion that there is merit in regulation almost for its own sake : our justification for regulation can be only some real need to prevent what is unfair or damaging .
4 But the sexual division of labour — whether it is the male , the female , or both parents who look after the young — is controlled by much the same forces as control other sexual differences and is therefore appropriately treated in this chapter .
5 The question of why we want it is a psychological one , which we answer by much the same means .
6 She had come through her sternest test , she had proven the singing budgie brigade was woefully wrong and that she was now ready to take her career into the even more rarefied atmosphere occupied by only a tiny handful of superstars .
7 Of somewhat similar type are those bays , which have spits springing from the headlands on either side and growing towards each other , the distal ends being separated by only a narrow channel .
8 This in turn had important consequences in the current historical view of the period , in perpetuating the proposition laid down by Wheeler in his Verulamium Report , that the decline of urban life in Britain in the third century was so catastrophic , that it was followed by only a partial and short-lived revival under Constantius Chlorus , and then by a steady decline into the Dark Ages .
9 Television 's failure to publicize the unemployment issue was matched by only a small decline in public concern about the issue while enormous public interest in health , education and social services preceded television 's switch towards those issues .
10 That was matched by a similarly dramatic increase in public perceptions that the party debate had now focused on defence , but by only a small increase in the public 's own concern about the issue .
11 Traditional , elegant and utterly exclusive , this hotel is fronted by lawned gardens and separated from the lake shore by only a small road .
12 Within a few months many assurances were broken ; there were wistful , unfulfilled hopes of James Edward Stuart landing and asserting himself as King James VII ; and in the House of Lords an attempt by Scottish members to repeal the Act was defeated by only a small majority .
13 Knowledge of the law relating to control of water pollution , beyond a broad conception of the pollution offences , however , is regarded as unimportant and is claimed by only a small minority of field men , because the job is done ‘ by experience ’ and the application of rules-of-thumb — not ‘ by the book ’ .
14 popular books and magazine articles about science can help to put across new developments , but even the most successful popular book is read by only a small proportion of the population .
15 But one must beware of accepting such statements at their face value as evidence of deep personal belief , for such phrases are taken from books which advised people how to compose documents , and Dr Margaret Spufford has shown how rural wills in Cambridgeshire were drawn up by only a small number of scribes .
16 They cause objects to seem to shift in position by only a small amount , which is what objects plausibly can be expected to do in the real world .
17 The number of visitors from parts of Scotland outwith the Edinburgh area was , in fact , comparatively small ( 19% ) , and exceeded the number of overseas visitors ( 16% ) by only a small margin .
18 With the naked eye , or with binoculars , it is possible to distinguish between two stars which differ by only a tenth of a magnitude .
19 The larger rodents in both regions are represented by only a single individual in the ant assemblage probably because their bones are too heavy for the ants to carry .
20 In contrast to the barn owl , the snowy owl is represented by only a single pellet sample .
21 The easiest and cheapest way of doing this was to excavate an 800 metres long by one metre square trench within a section of the ELR 's former double-track roadbed , now occupied by only a single track .
22 Near neighbours in genetic space are animals that differ from one another by only a single mutation .
23 Each unit , once landed , had therefore to make its own decisions undirected by the higher command , with the result that one company , though separated by only a short distance from the next , could be unaware of what their comrades were attempting .
24 In this image the state in liberal democracies is separated from its society by only a thin membrane of formal legality .
25 Sometimes it represents more serious and massive popular discontents , as in the renewed turn to Scottish nationalism in the late 1980s , plainly a reaction both to an all-British government supported by only a modest minority of Scots and a politically impotent all-British opposition party .
26 Since the actual value of income diverges from the expected value by only a random error it is tempting to replace the expected income term in equation ( 3.6 ) with actual income and rewrite equation ( 3.6 ) as :
27 DO YOU FANCY leaping off a high place attached to earth by only a large rubber band ?
28 Imports of wine suffered a similar drop to those at Bristol ; indeed the average annual import fell even more drastically , by over 45 per cent , but the decline in cloth exports , by only a little over 15 per cent , was much less .
29 DOZENS more East German refugees arrived outside the West German embassy yesterday seeking asylum and passage to the West , including some who missed by only a few minutes a train that took more than 800 of their compatriots to West Germany .
30 That decision may be taken instead by the EC summit due to be held in Rome in 12 months ' time — although the practical effect will be to delay the start of the intergovernmental conference by only a few months to early in 1991 .
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