Example sentences of "live [prep] [art] [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 I lived for the six weeks almost as one of the Community except that I did not sleep at the Manor .
2 The project outline claims that no-one lives in the inner zones , although this is disputed by local non-governmental organizations ( NGOs ) , which insist that tribal people currently use all of the forest .
3 The smallest of all the pigs , the bullet-shaped pygmy hog lives in the tall grasslands of northern India , where it is highly endangered because of the practice of agricultural grass-burning and , lately , armed rebellion ( see ‘ Pigs in distress ’ ) .
4 His instinct is to nourish the corruption where it lives in the dark places of himself .
5 The gopher tortoise that lives in the southwestern deserts of the United States needs one as a shelter in which to escape the worst of the mid-day heat and it digs into the sun-baked ground with slow ponderous sweeps of its armoured fore-legs .
6 The case highlighted the difficulty facing a mortgagee when a person other than its borrower lives at the mortgaged premises , for such person , as confirmed by this case , may have rights or interests in that property ( although the principles of the case are not being so strictly applied as was first thought — see Bristol & West Building Society v Henning [ 1985 ] 2 All ER 606 and Midland Bank Ltd v Dobson ( 1985 ) NLJ 26 July , 251 ) .
7 Living through the post-Darwinian debates , he invariably took up the cudgels on behalf of scientific rationalism .
8 If we were biologically capable of living for a million years , and wanted to do so , we should assess risks quite differently .
9 He then occupied a country living for a few years before returning to Winchester as chaplain to the Bishop , George Morley , who was a close friend of Izaak Walton .
10 People living near a new flats development in Sun Street , Darlington , complained to Darlington council about the noise and mess caused by builders .
11 But Malcolm Morley , although born in England , is an American painter , and in many respects Hockney became one in the 1960s though he 's now living with the French masters in a Côte d'Azur of his own imagining .
12 In the next age range , 70–74 , the most common arrangement is still living with an elderly spouses but one in three elderly people are living by themselves , often because their spouse has died .
13 The My Lai episode should , therefore , be a model to such peoples as the East Germans and the Romanians , who are just emerging from 50 years of living under the secret police .
14 The other visitors are living under the same conditions . ’
15 People living in a nearby travellers camp were woken by the crash , they describe the scene as something from a nightmare .
16 ‘ I have been living in a Social Services Home for about seven years .
17 By the middle of the nineteenth century Lancashire was the most urbanized county in England , with over half its population living in the fourteen towns which contained more than 10,000 inhabitants each .
18 I suppose the main difference I notice about living in the two environments is how my dress is n't bound by convention on the island , I just stick to wearing what is most comfortable .
19 Th the crime problem , as we 've already said is n't too , too great here but er nevertheless it 's important that we , we er keep our eyes open and try and keep crime out because some of these people that erm are living in the bigger cities that are criminals are now starting to discover that it 's easier to come out to places like Farnsfield and commit the crime , because we , we 're not experienced at it .
20 The controlling hierarchy of the Roman Catholic Church is , quite frankly , living in the Middle Ages .
21 " Damn it , we 're not living in the Middle Ages .
22 You 're living in the Middle Ages .
23 There is a lot of humorous reminiscing by the veterans about previous pilgrimages , about blisters , about the student who was cautioned for cooling his feet in a public reservoir , about the crippling last mile of the pilgrimage which , apparently ( who says we 're not living in the Middle Ages ? ) , we walk barefoot .
24 Thur er Wednesday and Thursday the children I have before and after school at Goose Hill School , you know the one , the one near me , just the bottom of the road on the corner , that 's had to be closed on Thursday because the boiler room had flooded on Wednesday and er they had to dry it out and also the children from Newminster were told anyone living in the Middle Queens area go home
25 Of the thousands of chair makers living in the scattered villages of the Chilterns in 1880 , 30 years later there were only a handful , working in factories concentrated in High Wycombe ( Saville 1957 ) .
26 It is unrealistic to assume that all the Palestinians currently living in the Arab states , whether still in refugee camps or integrated into their host society , could or would want to return to a West Bank-Gaza Palestinian state . ’
27 I say , " Mum , you 're living in the dark ages .
28 Indeed , as Barry Rubin has pointed out in his seminal history Paved with Good Intentions , " Tens of millions of Iranians , particularly those living in the rural villages and even the many peasants who had recently migrated to the cities , accepted these clerical proclamations as guides top proper behaviour towards their King .
29 Many people living in the rural areas of the South of Italy , the Highlands of Scotland , the West of Ireland or the interior of Portugal have lower incomes , fewer job opportunities and poorer social services than those in cities and in well-endowed agricultural areas .
30 Yet villagers continued to flock in searching for work , lured by often misplaced hopes , discontented with their inability to secure a decent standard of living in the rural areas , or driven out by the impossibility of securing any living at all .
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