Example sentences of "thus [noun] 's [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Thus Walters 's analysis of government data for 1949 and 1951 concluded that different conclusions could be reached depending on the measure of morbidity adopted .
2 As a courtier , he saw all issues in the light cast by the shifting world of court favour : thus Godoy 's support of the French alliance was consistently conditioned by his desire to use it against his enemies at court or his hopes of a safe retreat from these enemies in a Portuguese principality bestowed on him by France .
3 For the time being , notice that on two occasions , Carol interrupts the flow of her own talk , trying to remember when a particular event took place — and on both occasions her self-interruption is in LE , interrupting a Creole sequence : Thus Carol 's talk in this conversation can be analysed as making use of two distinct codes , " Creole " and " English " , between which she moves systematically from time to time .
4 Thus Barthes 's account of wrestling does not seem so strange and unlikely as if it were merely his own and there were no alternative account against which his was implicitly juxtaposed .
5 M. Polanyi wrote that beauty can reveal truth about nature ; thus Einstein 's theory of relativity was extolled by a fellow scientist for the grandeur , boldness , and directness of the thought which made everything more beautiful and grand .
6 Thus Wittgenstein 's notion of a criterion seems to provide the sort of compromise we are looking for .
7 Thus Marx 's model of historical development was in many respects only a sketch which left many problems unresolved .
8 Thus Mendel 's paper on the inherited characteristics of peas , published in an obscure journal in what is now part of Czechoslovakia , was uncited for many years , but the ideas contained within it are now an integral part of the genetics paradigm .
9 Thus Hanson 's role in redeploying industrial assets can be helpful .
10 Thus Moore 's position on the rightness and wrongness of actions is a form of rigoristic utilitarianism in which effects in terms of intrinsic good and bad replace effects in terms of pleasure and pain .
11 Thus Garland 's version of the prison suggests the mixture of Beccarian classicism ( proportionality for deterrent purposes ) and retributive justice ( proportionality according to desert ) that , as we have seen , was the hallmark of neoclassicism .
12 Thus Evans-Pritchard 's work on the magic and religion of the Azande , and on the political systems of the Nuer , and Malinowski 's investigations among the Trobriand islanders established a new style and standard for this kind of academic scholarship .
13 Thus Dewey 's policy of integrity of numbers has found great favour : an undertaking has been made that a piece of notation will not be revised and given another meaning .
14 Thus Gloucester 's possession of Chesham ( Bucks. ) gave him the service of the Wedons , who had held land in the manor since the thirteenth century and who acted as his bailiffs there .
15 Thus Gloucester 's possession of Chesham ( Bucks. ) gave him the service of the Wedons , who had held land in the manor since the thirteenth century and who acted as his bailiffs there .
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