Example sentences of "in [adj] [noun pl] [unc] " in BNC.
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1 | But in fifty years ' time we could be saying well did Jane pick the right one ? |
2 | This revealed that in normal embryos r5 motor neurons are in two subsets : a medial group of 10–20 neurons whose axons project anteriorly along the side of the floor plate , and a larger lateral group whose axons extend laterally before turning anteriorly into r4 ( Fig. 2 c , f ) . |
3 | The human Thy-1 gene which is expressed in neuronal cells in vivo ( 25 ) was used as a control . |
4 | There is a considerable drop-out rate in professional women 's tennis around the age of 20 . |
5 | Many came from academic families , and most were employed in prestigious women 's colleges on the East Coast of the US ( Furumoto and Scarsborough 1986 ) . |
6 | Pressure on consultants to work faster , participate in audit and management , and accept financial responsibility for their clinical work , coupled with the reduction in junior doctors ' hours , were considered to militate against educational developments . |
7 | Shortly , we shall launch a further information campaign because , to achieve the changes in junior doctors ' hours , it is important that the NHS task forces in each region can work with the juniors , managers and consultants to find practical solutions at their particular places of work . |
8 | He was now preparing his speech to the Academy , due to meet in eight hours ' time at the behest of the military . |
9 | Japanese car company , Mazda , has produced a hydrogen-powered prototype vehicle , which it claims could go into production in eight years ' time . |
10 | It was potentially a valuable and interesting debate , but , as happened during the debate on constitutional reform on 17 May , which was also held in private Members ' time , time has become rather squeezed , mainly because the Conservatives seem keen to spin out the debate through their speeches and interventions instead of allowing a proper debate . |
11 | Whatever the merits of this line of reasoning , it ignores a significant development in economic agents ' behaviour . |
12 | Each will provide , where appropriate , services in Regional Railways ' three areas of operation — urban , inter-urban and rural . |
13 | The Chiefs of Staff and most senior officers on both sides of the Atlantic and Pacific knew each other , having served together on NATO , CENTO , and SEATO staffs and in exchange appointments in each others ' armed forces . |
14 | And of course , we spend half our lives in each others ' houses , eating . |
15 | in each others ' arms , kissing , mouths open , |
16 | Now , with both Liverpool and Everton among the also-rans the two men find themselves in the ironic position of standing in each others ' way with the Premier League championship up for grabs . |
17 | Once or twice when she crept down to the turn in the stairs to see if it was safe to go and get something to eat , she was scared back by the murmur of unfamiliar voices , and saw three or four bicycles parked in the hall , leaning together with their pedals tangled in each others ' spokes , forming an intricate barrier to outside . |
18 | The Prime Minister , Shaikh Khalifa bin Sulman al-Khalifa , and the Vice-Chairman of the Baath Revolutionary Command Council of Iraq , Izzat Ibrahim , on Dec. 12 , 1989 , signed an agreement on non-interference in each others ' domestic affairs and on the non-use of force by either side . |
19 | There was no Christian architecture before A.D. 200 ; believers gathered together to meet in each others ' homes and used the courtyard fountain for baptism . |
20 | His positioning helped Iain Dowie — the pair have tended to get in each others ' way on past occasions — and Dowie revelled in the extra space . |
21 | sure , there may be some thinking that , there may also though be er if you move through to the forties you 're , y you 're twenty years on from the nineteen twenties , you , you 've had and you 've had deterioration in agricultural conditions er as , as we 've seen you 've got erm increasing landlord absenteeism , you , you 've got a downward , an upward pressure on rent in terms of how much was having to be paid in real terms , all of those things might have come together to , to , to push the peasant over and to push him outside . |
22 | It seems likely , from the small amount of information available , that the press was successful in fixing in working men 's minds the idea that contraception was a highly individualistic act prompted by self-interest . |
23 | Keith Fletcher , fielding at gully , shouted in that EastEnders ' accent : ‘ Well done , Greigy , give ‘ im another . ’ |
24 | To be a housemaster in that girls s |
25 | Details of these were given out at the April training day and included in that days ' notes . |
26 | In 1986 Farmers ' Weekly described the difficulties now overtaking land on the Isle of Grain in north Kent , where permanent pasture was drained and ploughed in the 1960s and early 1970s . |
27 | e.g. " Nationalism was overwhelmingly the most important factor in European affairs ibid.p.25 |
28 | The ‘ now ’ here instead corresponds to the ‘ now ’ on & alpha Centauri in 4.5 years ' time , because that is how long it takes light to get from here to there . |
29 | Its share of votes in social groups AB rose from 14 to 20 per cent on 1987 ; among the unemployed it actually did worse . |
30 | The social groups C2DE still make up 57 per cent of the electorate ; if Labour had enjoyed the same dominance among these voters as do the Tories in social groups ABC1 , they would have swept to power with a big majority . |