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

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31 In agricultural history it is evident that a macro-economic overview is necessarily limited because we have no usable index of agricultural rent over any considerable period .
32 ‘ And the chemise and knickaires also , in triple ninon I show you in the display case . ’
33 This ‘ immediacy ’ of meaning in oral society he relates to the society 's functional needs , citing Malinowski 's claim that ‘ in the Trobriands the outer world was only named in so far as it yielded useful things ’ ( ibid . ) .
34 Shortly after his arrival in Spanish Town he wrote to his cousin William Charles , informing him that : ‘ … some of your shawls sold for 200 and 300 per cent.profit … ’ , but adding :
35 In our studies of the mucosa associated microflora of the rectum in ulcerative colitis we showed that E coli were isolated relatively infrequently during active disease and that their numbers increased with clinical improvement .
36 For a third distinct trend in progressive rock we can turn to Pink Floyd , known for avant-garde experiments , often making use of collage , electronics and ‘ freeform ’ techniques .
37 So if you started off in complete darkness you rotate until you get complete darkness or the opposite .
38 Well erm in complete summary I 'd just like to go through three points again .
39 Thus in feudal society they include the relationship between the lord and vassal and the set of rights , duties and obligations which make up that relationship .
40 Even in incessant rain it still seemed lovely and , at least within its walls , remarkably unspoilt , though behind the medieval faades many houses have been relentlessly modernised .
41 If Britain had an interest in European co-operation it was as a way to withstand Soviet pressure and underpin British independence , not as a way to control Germany .
42 Just as Wernicke 's aphasia is in some sense the opposite of Broca 's aphasia , so transcortical aphasia is in some sense the opposite of conduction aphasia , because in transcortical aphasia it is repetition which is the best -preserved of the patient 's linguistic abilities , with the patient being extremely poor at understanding speech .
43 He was unfastening the waist of his trousers now , having kicked shoes and socks under a chair , and in helpless fury she bent down to snatch the damp towel from the floor , wrenching it round herself and jumping down from the bed , glaring at him so ferociously that he suddenly burst out laughing .
44 In due course we will add rights and freedoms not currently included in the Convention , extending into a full UK Bill of Rights .
45 Clearly there is some chicanery going on and perhaps in due course we will find out the truth .
46 In due course we shall see that people 's standard of living hinged broadly on their position in the landholding hierarchy , and it will be necessary to examine this after reviewing the material conditions it enabled them to enjoy .
47 Eventually the Corporal gave me a cigarette , and in due course we pulled over at a roadside cafe to have a cup of coffee and to stretch our legs .
48 In due course we will witness similar , half a world away on the Mile End Road . ’
49 In due course we might look closer at that episode with the Gilberd : she admits after much blushing and prevarication that he accused her in the High Street delicatessen of baby-snatching — did it openly , in a loud voice .
50 As for the real problem , we are in the midst of discussions with the Building Societies Association and others and in due course we shall make an announcement that will build on the assistance that we have already provided .
51 That is why in due course we shall be making proposals to do just that .
52 to some degree but not all and you know in in due course we will provide you with a full breakdown of this , exactly what is in and what is n't in .
53 We hope that our continuing work will shed light on these different concepts , and in due course we shall publish our results in medical journals .
54 I 'm erm I 've been working in low cost housing , housing charities , for a very long time , with Shelter and various other charities like that , and I never cease to be amazed that the Conservative Group , here or nationally , are hostile to subsidies for council housing , because the subsidy which goes to owner-occupiers , through mortgage tax relief , is very much greater than the subsidy that goes to council housing and there 's nothing we as a Council can do about this , but I do hope that in due course we will get a fair system of subsidising houses for everybody , so that wealthy people on high incomes who are getting a big subsidy on their housing through their tax relief , erm are not getting more than people on low incomes living in council houses .
55 In due course they will arrive in Safra to be offloaded over a beach and thence travel by road into the theatre of operations .
56 To each meeting members brought rare plants for general discussion and in due course they decided to publish their findings in a series of illustrated catalogues .
57 No doubt in due course they would become equally vocal in their complaints about the French , but Thiercelin decided that so far as possible his own behaviour should be above reproach .
58 He would tell them some story — precisely what , he had not decided — and in due course they would check and discover its falsehood .
59 But both found themselves possessed of a consuming interest in astronomy , to which in due course they devoted the rest of their lives after disposing of other distractions — in Hubble 's case , his law , and national service in two world wars .
60 But by 1750 fashion had changed — look at the new style of English landscape garden — and artists and poets set out to explore their own island in search of the picturesque ; in due course they arrived in Cumberland .
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