Example sentences of "starts with the [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 In the hallway , as Charlie helped her into her coat , his mother 's voice came to them , shouting , ‘ Half past eleven the recital starts with the Spanish Fandango . ’
2 The objective fossil record starts with the first Ediacaran assemblages ( 560–600 million years ( Myr ) ago ) , but some evidence suggests that metazoans were already in existence as early as 800–1000Myr ago .
3 Each branch point can be thought of as occurring at a cell division and so the branching pattern is also a cell lineage which starts with the multipotential stem cell .
4 The argument for Woolwich starts with the general principle enunciated by Lord Wright in Fibrosa Spolka Akcyjna v. Fairbairn Lawson Combe Barbour Ltd. [ 1943 ] A.C. 32 , 61 :
5 His species propagation theorizing itself was accordingly constructed , from the very opening of Notebook B , as an argument that starts with the sexual generation of one individual organism from another and ends with the propagation of one species from another .
6 the first weekend of ninety two is a busy one … our weekly roundup starts with the big rugby game in Gloucester … here 's Mark Kiff
7 For a metal complex with d electrons , the analysis usually starts with the free ion .
8 The range starts with the basic cedar-topped D-14 , at £525 , and finishes with the all-out luxury D-54 , which has back and sides of Brazilian rosewood , curly maple or Maccassar ebony and costs a hefty £1,695 .
9 Simmel starts with the original separation which engenders the subject as consciousness , and traces the stages of increasing distance between subject and object .
10 This again , starts with the original estimate for nineteen ninety-three , ninety-four , of one point eight nine two million pounds , and details of changes agreed by the Policy Committee last November .
11 Also described as traditional ( or incremental ) budgeting , the pragmatic approach starts with the previous year 's allocation of resources and updates them for any anticipated changes in , for example , planned activities , prices , or the total money available .
12 The masquerade of camp becomes less a self-concealment than a kind of attack , and untruth a virtue : many a young man , says Wilde , ‘ starts with the natural gift of exaggeration which , if encouraged could flourish .
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