Example sentences of "and [adv] the [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 During its lifetime , both in peacetime and war ( e.g. WW II , Korea , the Falklands and latterly the Gulf ) the railway has carried hundreds of thousands of tons of stores and equipments internally for the RAOC for storage and issue , also to the REME at 34 Base Workshop for repair .
2 WHILE ENJOYING the high quality of play by England during the recent New Zealand tour and latterly the World Cup , and appreciating the fitness they displayed , I could n't help but wonder about the current medical practices being used to prepare players for matches while still injured .
3 But the introduction of the reaping machine , the self-binder and latterly the combine-harvester made the use of narrow stetches impossible , as the continual jolting over the deep furrows soon put the most robust machine out of action .
4 Many of the techniques , and importantly the theories , used to analyse such data make assumptions about the nature of such processes , particularly that they are symmetrical and reversible .
5 Onward and upward the track wound , clinging to the side of the ridge like a pale slippery centipede .
6 And luckily the bike had fallen on its left side so the gears and chain ring etc were n't damaged .
7 I kept piling in crosses and luckily the lads got on the end of them . ’
8 If the question of professional misconduct had been pursued the issue would not merely have been the efficacy of the Code but the power of the employer against the strength and stature of the profession , and thence the credibility of the profession .
9 George Healey was a remarkable man who devoted his whole adult life to the cause of deaf people , both in Liverpool and nationally first through the N.D.D.S. and thence the B.D.D.A. He was born in Gateacre , Liverpool and lost his hearing at the age of three months as a result of brain fever following a fall from the arms of his nurse , although his deafness was not discovered until he was two years old .
10 In addition to the other help the Saudis were providing to Iraq in different forms , including loans of oil , they allowed Iraq to construct a 500,000 b/d spur line to link up with Petroline and thence the Red Sea .
11 If it comes to light that I was in that house with Adam and the others , he thought with cold clarity , if someone tells the papers , or the police and thence the papers , that I was there during the summer of 1976 , living there , it will be all up with me .
12 But , once it exists , it can become a shackle rather than an inspiration , and when it does do so , one has to seek to destroy it , and thence the animus of Russell 's attacks on organized religion .
13 The foregoing review has been necessary to demonstrate what now seems almost unbelievable ; that physical geography for so long contrived to ignore the significance of human activity and thence the potential which associated studies afford .
14 Remark Whilst this proof uses the " contradiction method " it gets to this contradiction by supposing the existence of a counterexample , hence , by principle W , a smallest counterexample and thence the contradiction .
15 The inedibility of the early land plants to animals and , apparently , fungi led to the great Coal Measures of the Carboniferous and thus to the fuel of the Industrial Revolution and thence the technology for the destruction of those forests ' successors .
16 So far we have considered man-made materials where the composition reflects the processing , but the composition of materials such as stones and gems , which were used without chemical modification , can also sometimes indicate their source , and thereby the authenticity of artefacts made from them .
17 These indicators of the native film industry 's weakness encouraged The Federation of British Industries to intensify its campaign to bring attention to the way in which the disappearance of British films from the world 's screens impacted on ‘ the prestige of the country as a whole , and thereby the prestige of British industry also ’ .
18 Sandor Rado , in an article devoted to the elucidation of manic-depressive disorders , expresses the opinion that ‘ At the bottom of the melancholiac 's profound dread of impoverishment there is really simply a dread of starvation … drinking at the mother 's breast remains the radiant image of unremitting , forgiving love , ’ and he adds that ‘ It is certainly no mere chance that the Madonna nursing the Child has become the emblem of a mighty religion and thereby the emblem of a whole epoch in our Western civilization .
19 New drug delivery systems could make use of the interactive facility of the ocular glycoproteins and the corneal surface to prolong the retention of , and thereby the bioavailability of , drugs .
20 In 1912 , Key wrote of the women 's movement as ideally winning back ‘ the wife to the husband , the mother to the children , and thereby the home to all ’ .
21 The physical segregation of the city ‘ offers the group , and thereby the individuals who compose the group , a place and a role in the total organisation of city life ’ .
22 On both counts it was , above all , the status of the word that was brought into question — and thereby the Gesamtkunst ideal as whole .
23 Now I felt in a position to explore the fate of this culture , and thereby the roots of the contemporary political landscape .
24 And by improving the condition of any one of these four vital aspects of yourself , you will actually be improving the other three and thereby the quality of the life you live .
25 This more positive role adopted by the CNAA in recent years as a direct consequence of the financial cuts inflicted on polytechnics by the government and by the local authorities , cuts which if they go too deep are bound adversely to affect the quality of the work and thereby the quality of the courses validated by the CNAA .
26 Those who would buy more than unc logically opt for the two-part tariff and thereby the right to buy extra units at
27 Available space is often the cause of restricting the number of machines that can be installed in a factory and thereby the production capacity .
28 In this section we want to look firstly at why banks have an interest in expanding the volume of deposits and thereby the stock of money .
29 The skeleton of all echinoderms except the sea cucumbers is a relatively strong assembly of calcite plates ; the animals are built from an interlocking mosaic of such plates , and mostly the skeletons are rigid enough to have a high chance of fossilization .
30 As a successful town , it is not unlikely that it also became a pagus centre for part of the Dobunni and additionally the residence of the regionarius mentioned above ( p. 34 ) .
  Next page