Example sentences of "in [adj] [pos pn] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | In 1934 my father left his wife and two-year-old daughter in the north , and came to London . |
2 | George Wade then took over the studio of Sir J. Edgar Boehm [ q.v. ] and in 1891 his bust of I. J. Paderewski was so appreciated that 500 reproductions of it were ordered for the American market alone . |
3 | In 1838 his father inherited a small property in Ulverston in the Furness peninsula , Lancashire , and from there John attended King William 's College , Isle of Man . |
4 | One day when we were vacationing in Santa Fe in 1943 my daughter , Jennifer , who was then 3 , asked me why she could not see the picture I had just taken of her . |
5 | Finally , in 1948 my parents received from the Air Ministry a photograph of the grave at Tourlaville , a simple white cross bearing the name ‘ P/O T Atherton ’ . |
6 | When he retired in 1971 his manager , Mr Barrett said that he was the best digger driver they had ever had . |
7 | Nationalised industries usually have an advantage against their ‘ sponsoring ’ ministry in that their management is more continuous than that of ministers and mandarins , but this was not the case for Citrine . |
8 | Continuously varying traits differ from Mendel 's peas in that their variation is probably controlled by a large number of genes , and by environmental differences too . |
9 | There are many cases of conversion of documents which are intrinsically valueless but have a value in that their possession confers rights on the holder . |
10 | All you can do is give them a bit of comfort in that their letters have been read . |
11 | Organisms , then , are like vortices in that their structure is maintained by a flow of energy , but the complexity of that structure is controlled by stable replicating molecules . |
12 | Most are basically uncoordinated in that their planning probably represents the outcome of good fortune or minimal management . |
13 | But most of them can take solace in that their performances are n't being reflected in the results of late . |
14 | ‘ Could we ? ’ both Leith and Sebastian asked together , the idea of renting accommodation swiftly tossed aside , as it quickly sank in that their father , trustee to the considerable amount of money left to them by his father , seemed prepared to use his discretionary right and let them have it now . |
15 | Single-parent families , that is mothers , are blamed for continuing this process , producing a culture of dependency and poverty in that their children are said to grow up with poor interpersonal skills , low educational achievement , and lack of marketable skills . |
16 | They 'll be saying , Do you remember a a big fat woman living in that their house , with a white apron running after us . |
17 | With reference to Genette 's definition they are exceptional in that their object texts are not only other ‘ noble ’ works of literature but quotations from scholars , product labels , radio broadcasts , advertisements , propaganda slogans , and various other ‘ public texts ’ or textual objets trouvés . |
18 | Although prepared foods are very good there is a feeling that there may be some advantage to live foods in that their vitamins , minerals and so on have not been affected by any processing . |
19 | They made a conscious decision not to deal with the new carpet superstores , largely because profit margins would be so low in that their bulk purchasing power made them able to demand low margins . |
20 | The effect on the indigenous peoples has been debilitating in that their loss of faith in , for example , indigenous medicine has been combined with a realization of the ineffectiveness of western medicine in treating psychosomatic illness . |
21 | Although they are keywords , the names of pseudo variables such as PI , LOMEM , HIMEM , PAGE , TIME , etc , act as variables in that their names can form the first part of the name of another variable . |
22 | The advantage of this approach would be that it would enable a mixed economy to be operated i.e. some institutions be validated in the present way ; , others who were ‘ chartered ’ would not necessarily be accredited for all their courses in that their courses would be validated in the present ways . |
23 | Down are going through something of an identity crisis in that their form fluctuates wildly from week to week . |
24 | Some ten per cent of theses in the present study are regarded as unproductive in that their authors failed to publish related papers ; the original theses were never consulted , and the theses have never been cited . |
25 | It was considered one of the advanced mills , advanced in that their employees worked only the ten-hour day and finished work at one o'clock on a Saturday . |
26 | Many quite fluent Dyirbal speakers simply represented a dead end in that their intuitions could not be accessed . |
27 | She was fortunate in that her income came from a family trust fund , so Ralph had never been able to get his hands on the capital . |
28 | As Benazir Bhutto was sworn in the news came in that her choice for speaker had been elected in Punjab . |
29 | This class maintains the smooth running of the social order and economic system , but differs from the dominant bourgeois class in that its wealth is not derived from capital . |
30 | It was unlike other British forces in that its members were armed and subjected to military discipline . |