Example sentences of "well [verb] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Now you can tell how well developed an organ is in two ways : either by seeing how big it is , or by feeling the heat it generates . |
2 | It should be said , however , that the press behind the neck exercise works the upper trapezius quite heavily , so if the trapezius muscles are already well developed the exercise should be avoided . |
3 | In individuals in whom some mediated immunity is not well developed the growth and defemination , de defemination phase may take over altogether . |
4 | All seems to me and I could quote other other references from P P Gs as well to support the point , seems to me that the thrust of government guidance is balance . |
5 | In these days of widespread family planning , you might well think the number of unwanted pregnancies is on the decline . |
6 | It is possible , however , that quick approximations could be devised that would reduce the work-load by a factor of 5 , while improvements in hardware over the next few years may well absorb the rest . |
7 | There is otherwise a grave danger that the people whom he addresses might well regard the policeman as a rival lout . |
8 | ‘ Virgin 1215 could well deliver an audience of 10 some million listeners worth an estimated £40m per annum in advertising revenue , ’ the report said . |
9 | We could equally well construct an index in a way suggested by Paasche . |
10 | Equally , many countries would do well to acknowledge the honesty of subSaharan nations in being largely open about the nature and scale of the epidemic within their borders . |
11 | And last but not least is Ross Hickling 's pastel study of the Gateshead Garden Festival ( 057 ) which , if his present run of good fortune still goes his way , might well scoop the pool . |
12 | If the occupier has reason to anticipate the presence of a child trespasser he would do well to erect an obstacle to entry that is not in itself dangerous . |
13 | He had , in fact , treated her as a man might well treat a wife to whom he 'd been married for some years — a relaxed , comfortable relationship in which there was no need for any outward signs of affection . |
14 | In this Presidential Election Year , Pam could well treat the campaign trail once again for her friend the President . |
15 | He will do well administering the Office , but I am frankly afraid of him in the House . ’ |
16 | Well make the veg if I do that . |
17 | The next morning it 's back here and I said well make an appointment to see him then . |
18 | When the nest-cup is well formed the bird fetches lichen and weaves this on to the outside of the nest . |
19 | But we might as well eat the food anyway . ’ |
20 | The most important of these will be specified in the Articles of Association , and may well oblige the manager to sell his shares at a price probably less than market value . |
21 | There were witnesses to that , so he might as well earn a bonus point by mentioning it first . |
22 | Such a person may well earn a penalty if they continue to back-pedal . |
23 | This is due to many factors , one of the more obvious of which is that the cumulative physical demands of manual work may well affect the worker 's health . |
24 | The continuing emphasis on family relationships may well affect the way Japan copes with the rapid ageing of the population which faces her over the next three decades . |
25 | Moreover , the presence of unco-operative minority shareholders may well affect the price a purchaser is prepared to offer . |
26 | Exposure to the surrounding solution of the parts of the cell membrane that are normally in apposition might well affect the metabolism within the cell . |
27 | ‘ … slow-down already seen in many fields may well affect the nature of scientific communication ’ . |
28 | However well charted the world may be there is still adventure , danger and hardship for some travellers to endure : Christina Dodwell experienced ‘ cold terror ’ while crossing the rapids of the Laigap River in Papua New Guinea ; Dervla Murphy survived an attack by wolves and several rape attempts ; Rosie Atkins , travelling round the world with her husband and two children , was trapped overnight in a battered old coach by a landslide in Ladakh . |
29 | Playing these holes well made the difference . |
30 | So this meant , these sort of er , theoretical reasons may well explain a change in composition of , of world trade rela agriculture 's relative decline , manufacturing 's relative rise . |