Example sentences of "to bring [adv prt] a [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Like I like to bring on a good horse properly .
2 KENNY Dalglish is poised to bring in a Danish defender to make up for the disappointment of losing £2.5 million Craig Short .
3 There are plans to bring in a similar scheme in Oxford — it 's going to cost eighteen million pounds and take five years .
4 Our children are not being served by this code and it 's time for the government to bring in a complete tobacco advertising ban
5 The next problem was to bring in a small phone box .
6 ‘ Child care is brilliant , ’ she added , explaining that after-school care is a matter of course with 90 per cent of women needing to bring in a second wage to survive .
7 BIIBA , as the trade association attempting to represent most middlemen , is equally unhappy that Fimbra is attempting to bring in a centralised insurance scheme , as most of BIIBA 's members have their own professional indemnity insurance cover .
8 The second , one that we have been promoting , is to bring in a new team of professional managers , each experienced at running a multibillion-dollar business unit .
9 The government 's being urged to bring in a new speed limit on one of the region 's worst accident blackspots .
10 But because of the nature , because of the nature of our amendment , we do need to remind the opposition that er prior to that date was facing major social economic problems as vital services in the local economy fell victim to the consequences of planning thirty million out of the budget in order to bring in a low poll tax .
11 The method adopted was to canvass for capital donations that could then be invested to bring in a regular income , and both Balfour and Law were used to raise the wind .
12 Why do we have to bring in a cut-throat operator like Guy Sterne ? ’
13 During the 1930s , however , it was the Conservatives who capitalized most effectively on the larger consequences of the Wall Street Crash , using them not only to bring down a Labour Government and introduce tariffs aimed at imperial consolidation , but also to promote among the masses the spirit of patriotic self-congratulation so eloquently projected by Stanley Baldwin :
14 It is vital to bring down a high fever immediately by using infant paracetamol , removing any extra clothing , opening a window in a warm room or by tepid sponging .
15 Seconds later , he asked me urgently to bring over a large roll of cotton-wool .
16 We want to bring up a nice girl , not a little pig .
17 Living alone and trying to bring up a small daughter is no easy task , and taking extra time to learn a new skill is just an added burden . ’
18 She was a war widow and worked round the clock in her efforts to bring up a young family by herself .
19 No woman should be expected to bring up a large family on her own .
20 I hope that a general election will be declared soon , that it will be fair , and that it will serve to bring back a decent system .
21 As home-brewing returns , some groups are striving to bring back a milder version of Prohibition .
22 TNC still needs to be tailored by OEMs for specific Unix flavours , although the company says it plans to bring out a shrink-wrapped version in the future .
23 In future it may be possible to bring out a first novel in paperback , and then once an author is established we could bring out his or her second and third novels in hardback .
24 Unfortunately , there are no plans to bring out a similar bundle in the UK in the near future .
25 EMC is said to have plans of its own to bring out a new generation of Symmetrix , and is certainly not daunted by the hot breath of competition — it just announced a two-for-one stock split to be effected via a scrip dividend .
26 Mountain View-based Silicon Graphics Inc has fulfilled its promise to bring out a new family of Iris Indigo RISC personal computers based on the 50MHz R4000SC RISC from its MIPS Technology subsidiary .
27 He 'd be there himself except that the newsroom was on sodding tenterhooks waiting to see if Heath would call a sodding snap election and they 'd have to bring out a sodding slip edition .
28 As a precaution , Alexandra took her fork round to the far side of the wain , in case her mother should be looking from a window , and plunged and twisted it in most expertly in order to bring out a huge wedge of tawny grasses , cut last summer in these very meadows .
29 But it is evident that publishers , to stay in business , need to bring out a large number of titles every year .
30 Any attempt by the administration to bring about a comprehensive lifting of sanctions before all US conditions were met had long been expected to meet strong opposition in Congress .
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