Example sentences of "occur in the [noun sg] in " in BNC.

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1 Both also need to be helped to understand the nature of the changes occurring in the area in which they live — whether disappearing hedgerows or the closing down of a street market .
2 If storage is at the mean maximum temperature and humidity , this will give some exaggeration of actual market conditions , the extent of which will depend on diurnal and seasonal variations occurring in the market in question .
3 These show not more than 15 occurring in the county in any winter in the period 1962 to 1976 ; in many winters only one or two are seen .
4 Yet this you would expect ; it is one of the hallmarks of the dominant culture , after all , that it is about thirty to fifty years behind what is actually occurring in the world in the present time .
5 The most notable example of this occurred in the county in 1264 , when the troops of Simon de Montfort defeated Henry Ill at the Battle of Lewes .
6 The prayer that Grandfather Smallweed is remembering occurs in the Litany in The Book of Common Prayer : ‘ from plague , pestilence and famine ; from battle , and murder , and from sudden death , Good Lord , deliver us . ’
7 It is a process in literature that has occurred in the past in other fields .
8 Well before the events of 1987 , changes had occurred in the way in which the struggle between tankers and their assailants was conducted .
9 Indeed , the single most important social change to have occurred in the countryside in recent years has concerned the changing social and occupational composition of its population .
10 That figural designs began to occur in the west in any numbers ( i.e. not counting the very early example from Exeter : Bidwell 1979 ) in approximately the same period as a further development of figural design is apparent in the southeast , is an interesting possibility : this may also have been contemporary with the first appearance of fully centralised designs .
11 Conceptualizations of police work are therefore derived from and embedded in such phenomena as the day-to-day experience of police duties , which is itself contextually related to the sorts of crime that occur in the area in which the station is located , common-sense notions about policing contained in the occupational culture , and stereotypes of policing found in the wider culture .
12 Another speaker , Michael Traber , WACC 's Director of Studies and Publications , said : ‘ It is the task of the mass media and theology to read the signs of the times and to interpret the changes that occur in the world in order to make sense of them . ’
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