I.adjectiveCOLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a local call
▪ Local calls are free at weekends.
a local charity (=one that operates near the place where you live)
▪ All the money raised goes to local charities.
a local clinic
▪ She's involved in health care education at a local clinic.
a local company
▪ The new development will bring more business to local companies.
a local craft
▪ local crafts such as glass blowing and leather work
a local custom
▪ We were unfamiliar with the local customs.
a local firm
▪ The equipment was supplied by a local firm.
a local hero
▪ Richards was a local hero, a star of the football club.
a local landmark
▪ This oddly shaped rock is a well-known local landmark.
a local legend
▪ According to a local legend, the tree was planted by a wizard.
a local library
▪ This information is available at your local library.
a local newspaper
▪ The store advertises in the local newspaper.
a local paper
▪ You could try putting an advert in the local paper.
a local politician
▪ The plan is strongly supported by local politicians.
a local school (=a school near where someone lives)
▪ They sent their kids to the local school.
a local tradition
▪ The villagers are all keen to preserve local traditions.
a local/national/statewide etc poll
▪ Local polls show him leading by only two or three points.
a local/regional election
▪ The Green Party increased its share of the vote in the French regional elections.
local anaesthetic (=one that only affects a particular area of your body)
▪ Eye surgery is often performed using a local anaesthetic.
local area network
Local Authority
local authority
▪ Central government is trying to stop local authorities overspending.
local call
local colour
▪ His description of the smells from the market added a touch of local color.
local council
local culture
▪ The local culture of the island has much to interest visitors.
local dialect
▪ the local dialect
local government
local history (=the history of events in a particular local area)
▪ The building is now a museum of local history.
local history
local independence
▪ The new constitution aims to strengthen local independence.
local opposition
▪ It took three years to overcome local opposition from environmentalists.
local paper
local politics
▪ Ann is very active in local politics.
local produce
▪ Local produce is used wherever possible.
local radio
▪ Jobs may be advertised in local newspapers or on local radio.
local radio
local rag
local rag
▪ He writes for the local rag.
local stockists
▪ Call us to order or to get details of local stockists.
local time
▪ We’ll arrive in Boston at 4 o'clock local time.
local traffic
▪ There is quite a lot of local traffic.
local vernacular (=language spoken in a particular area)
▪ He lapsed into the local vernacular .
local/national importance
▪ Crime is an issue of national importance.
local/national/international coverage (=provided by local, national etc media)
▪ Bangladesh doesn't get much international coverage.
local/regional office
▪ The agency has a network of regional offices.
local/state/city government
▪ The interference in local government by central government is not just financial, but political.
national/local expenditure (=money spent by national or local government)
▪ There have been cuts in local expenditure on education.
sb’s local doctor (=working near where you live)
▪ You should go and see your local doctor.
small/local trader
▪ a small trader who sells hats in Oxford
the local area
▪ He quickly made friends in the local area.
the local church (=the one in a particular area, or near where you live)
▪ The local church dates from the 12th century.
the local community
▪ Our school is the centre of the local community.
the local jail
▪ The suspects were taken to the local jail.
the local population
▪ The local population gave them a warm welcome.
the local press
▪ Evening classes are advertised in the local press.
the local/national currency (=the type of money that a particular country uses)
▪ The local currency of Zambia is the 'kwacha'.
the local/national/domestic economy (=in one particular country or area)
▪ The new factory has given a massive boost to the local economy.
the national/local media
▪ The case received enormous publicity in the national media.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
area
▪ Graphics: Methods of transmitting broadcast quality vision through a digital local area network.
▪ You will have to buy this directly or indirectly from one of the telephone companies serving your local area.
▪ Many primary teachers start investigations of the past by working out from the history of the school, village or local area.
▪ Programs of study closely related to the needs of the local area, and geared to its socioeconomic modernization. 2.
▪ National and international events are covered when they affect the local area.
▪ Really sophisticated users may like to invest in the ultimate communications link between the two systems, a local area network.
▪ Clearly our valuable training input to the local area has not featured as a priority on the local Labour Party agenda.
authority
▪ The local authority obtained an emergency protection order and placed the girl with foster parents.
▪ However, should any local authority disagree with this position, would you please advise me immediately.
▪ Some local authorities have been very effective at this - in Greenwich, people who registered were entered in a prize draw.
▪ Yet the two local authority community workers know the sharper side of Muriel's tongue.
▪ The family proceedings court made care orders in favour of the local authority in respect of both children.
▪ The total is then distributed among local authorities on the basis of the number of people listed on the Poll Tax register.
▪ The event is backed by all five Merseyside local authorities and the Sports Council.
▪ He is right to draw attention to the hypocrisy of those local authorities, as he has described it.
community
▪ At another level, there is the question of who should determine major decisions which affect local communities.
▪ Table V. i summarizes the responses we received as to the role individuals should play within their local community.
▪ The problem is that the burden to oppose a development falls upon local communities.
▪ I got her a catalogue from the local community college, and we started talking about courses.
▪ Contact your local community health council by letter or telephone and ask to be put in touch with whoever is responsible for your area.
▪ To that end, its project supervisors hold regular meetings with local community leaders.
▪ These are not peripheral issues; they are key issues to individuals, families and local communities.
▪ Its vigour and vitality attest to a popular piety deeply rooted in the everyday life of the local community.
council
▪ Local councils Wobbly Could a local council go bust?
▪ For many years, he had been on the local council.
▪ With local councils deadlocked, King must decide.
▪ At 63, he works at the Open University and is another member of the local council.
▪ Friday I organised a petition to the local council for a safe play area.
▪ Then a Private Members' Bill established a trust to protect it, consisting of representatives from five local councils.
▪ They say they're only doing what the local council would do if it was allowed.
▪ A lot of local councils and a lot of private industry under deregulation are now turning to the buses.
currency
▪ These are combined to give an overall requirement which is grossed up for tax and converted into the local currency.
▪ In local currencies, sales rose 11 percent.
▪ Devaluation will increase the local currency costs of servicing foreign currency-denominated debt.
▪ Credit cards or local currency accepted.
▪ Prices are set in local currencies.
economy
▪ The index is designed to measure the performance of the local economy.
▪ A three year programme of four linked projects will investigate small services sector firms in five types of local economy in Britain.
▪ Louis area that is designed to represent the local economy.
▪ Tourism is also of particular importance in some regions and may dominate the local economy.
▪ The local economy exploded, fueled by thousands of new auto workers.
▪ Both were piecemeal efforts, too far from the city centre, whose shops and businesses drive the local economy.
▪ And the local economy in Sucumbios is suffering.
education
▪ Information about local authority policy and arrangements is clearly intended to provoke public awareness and discussion of local education policy generally.
▪ On education he applauded the Conservatives for taking school budgets out of control of local education authorities.
▪ All schools will be free to manage their day-to-day budgets, with local education authorities given a new strategic role.
▪ The many drafts of the report on Birmingham local education authority showed inconsistencies.
▪ Mr. Eggar I hope that the local education authority will encourage schools to go grant maintained.
▪ A local education authority is to build a new school gymnasium.
▪ As we have seen, these three parties are united by a fourth, the local education authority.
election
▪ Candidates in local elections can expect their followers not only to vote for them but to campaign for them as well.
▪ This is occasionally true in local elections, where the margin between candidates can be rather small.
▪ The ruling countered moves in both Hamburg and Schleswig-Holstein to enfranchise certain categories of foreigners in local elections.
▪ There were hints before the local elections, rumours of some sort of relaunch of the Left.
▪ With local elections due in April 1991, the party knew that its candidates would be clamouring for lots of vote-winning enticements.
▪ It is, of course, conceivable that the community charge will have a bigger direct effect on local elections in future years.
▪ Since then, grass-roots groups have been supporting Communist candidates in local elections across the country.
▪ Labour took 11 seats from the Tories in the 1990 local elections.
government
▪ Thus we can talk of a local government system which is different from a central government system but nevertheless interacts with it.
▪ All agreed that new state and local government workers should be brought under the system, assuring new revenues.
▪ This conclusion needs to be modified in the light of the changes in local government.
▪ Executives point to increased regulatory pressures as well as scrawny profit margins on underwriting new state and local government issues.
▪ The correct interpretation is to regard local government services as simply those services provided by local government in Particular circumstances.
▪ Second, economic expansion and diversification have provided a solid fiscal base for local government.
▪ According to the new law local parliaments would be empowered to conduct inspection and auditing of local governments.
▪ They were also expected to meet in Sarajevo with officials from international lending institutions and local government officials.
history
▪ Sources for local history Document sources are indispensible for most local history studies.
▪ Those visiting the current exhibit will learn that black churches and their leaders played key roles in local history.
▪ Sometimes amateur film has a value for local history.
▪ This has the great advantage of allowing local history materials to be used.
▪ It is one of those nice little problems of local history.
▪ And I began to discover some recent local history as I delved deeper into this pit of hell.
▪ Not on Sunday. museum of local history, illustrating the life of Edinburgh from early times.
level
▪ The idea is that community standards could be more closely applied on a local level.
▪ That fact alone is reason enough to return authority to the local level.
▪ Much will depend on how local managers and clinicians implement the reforms at local level.
▪ Decisions will be made at the local level.
▪ At the local level it was expressed by a shared set of values and policies, operating within a welfare state consensus.
▪ These men had strong territorial roots, but at local level.
▪ Such issues can only be resolved at local level.
▪ Only at the close of the summer did things improve at the central, though not yet at the local level.
network
▪ The restructuring will enable it to focus better on the two areas of its expertise in both wide area and local networks.
▪ Tom is connected to a local network, which serves about 1000 users.
▪ Client-server applications are becoming a reality with performance problems being addressed by faster computers, faster local network speeds and improving software.
▪ The two companies have also announced an agreement to co-operate on local network management technologies.
▪ As a result, he expects to see a wireless local network launched before the end of the year.
▪ The final pressure reduction is to about 50 millibars to supply the local network, which then takes gas to individual properties.
▪ It is also claimed to provide a high degree of flexibility for connecting different types of data terminals and local networks.
▪ Modular, diverse and dispersed small-scale generating facilities using local renewable energy sources would support the local network.
news
▪ A local news agency said gangs paraded several severed heads around the town.
▪ On any given weekday night, around thirty-eight million people are watching the network news, with millions more watching local news.
▪ Weekly newspapers - the local story Weeklies are concerned with local news and events.
▪ The jovial anchorman on the local news reaches into the pocket of his blazer and extracts a fortune cookie.
▪ Make sure that all the local news people have the appropriate office and home phone numbers.
▪ The staid and once-serious network news has begun to look like glitzy local news operations.
▪ On the local news on the radio. poor old bloke!
▪ You know, the twenty-four-hour local news channel.
newspaper
▪ So disillusioned and grumpy is he that he writes a local newspaper column on the subject.
▪ I noticed a caption in my local newspaper the other day, identifying a group of high school cheerleaders.
▪ The Bolton Area Health Authority was forced to reveal his identity after he was named in local newspapers.
▪ Each week, sometimes twice weekly, food stores advertise their specials in the local newspapers.
▪ Advertisements should be placed in local newspapers and other public places seeking contact from nurses who are not in employment.
▪ He got a photograph of himself and his restaurant on the front page of the local newspaper.
official
▪ Others practice their faiths more openly in unauthorized churches or temples, hoping local officials will turn a blind eye.
▪ Alameda County Supervisor Mary King hastily organized a briefing for local officials next week.
▪ The only ones with a steady income were teachers, storekeepers and local officials.
▪ Currently, 40 governors, legislators in 21 states and more than 17, 000 local officials are subject to various limits.
▪ In reality guerrilla action was largely indiscriminate with sporadic attacks on the occasional landlord, local official, or police post.
▪ But aides to Lungren have said that nothing local officials do will let them skirt state laws.
▪ For new applicants, different councils' rules and regulations on allocations may be more or less strictly enforced by local officials.
▪ Many local officials are still unaware that the state has granted them the powers to set boating laws for their local waters.
paper
▪ She would have to look at the local papers.
▪ Down the block the neighborhood dead-ended in abandoned farmland that Mami read in the local paper the developers were negotiating to buy.
▪ Turn to the business page in your local paper.
▪ My keen enemy from the local paper was there.
▪ Gossip columnists from the local papers wrote about them.
▪ At 13 she took a weekend job with a local paper and promptly demanded a pay rise.
▪ With that new black Schwinn Racer, I contracted with our local paper for a delivery route.
people
▪ As we walked around this pretty little island we were charmed by the friendliness of the local people.
▪ At the same time we expose local people to new developments that may be beneficial to cultural activities.
▪ But the Gypsies say they just want to get on with the local people.
▪ Money could then be ploughed into smaller projects which create jobs, meet the needs of local people and conserve the environment.
▪ Nevertheless, it's worried and surprised local people and politicians.
▪ Some churches are closed against the will of local people to fit in with diocesan pastoral plans.
police
▪ They say he may strike again and they're appealing to anyone who recognises this picture to contact their local police station.
▪ Anti-crime efforts including federal aid for hiring 100, 000 new local police officers.
▪ At the other extreme, they can not long do the job of a local police force.
▪ Community-oriented policing turns the local police officer into their ally.
▪ There are moves to have the chief constables of the new forces appointed directly by the Home Secretary instead of local police authorities.
▪ The local police frequently arrested students for exceeding the speed limit or other minor infractions of the law.
▪ After the local police were alerted, a man was apprehended suspected to be disturbing the terns and collecting their eggs.
▪ On May 13, Birmingham was quiet; threatened with intervention, local police decided they could keep order.
politics
▪ What form would you expect such local politics to take?
▪ Dole, raised in a Democratic family, registered as a Republican because the party dominated local politics.
▪ What significance do you think Cockburn and Dearlove would attach to local politics in explaining the changes of the early 1970s?
▪ The recall made them pay for that mistake and sent out a terrible message about making an error in local politics.
▪ The nationalization of local politics arose from a specific combination of economic, social and political processes which no longer applies.
▪ It is to the development of this particular type of local politics that we now turn.
▪ In the case of local politics, should this mean more than just the local implementation of national policy?
▪ The homogeneity of local politics in the 1950s and early 1960s was the exception rather than the rule.
press
▪ In conjunction with our radio broadcasts, we often run the campaign in the local press and Evening News.
▪ When it comes to advertising, more use could be made of diocesan newspapers in addition to parish magazines and the local press.
▪ By February the local press had got wind of the affair.
▪ If so, then this will be advised in the local press.
▪ A current entertainments page from the local press. 26.
▪ Despite advertising in the local press, only two people appeared to have arrived.
▪ The hunt can do without a report like that in the local press.
▪ If relevant let local press and media know what you are running.
radio
▪ The evacuation followed a warning to a local radio station at 12.50am.
▪ Those in local radio believe that the Church should put more resources into encouraging and developing modern music and musicians.
▪ Medium-sized local radio stations in cities could find themselves competing for revenue with the newcomer, it added.
▪ In the last few weeks she became a local radio presenter.
▪ The band will also record public service announcements for local radio stations, urging petitions to protest the arrest.
▪ There was a street petition and coverage on local radio and in the local newspaper.
▪ Local radio Here is your golden media opportunity for local radio is an expanding market place for public relations.
▪ The 21 independent local radio stations all over the Republic claim they are getting audiences of up to three million listeners each week.
resident
▪ One local resident explained the factors behind the agreement: The agreement when it was signed was full of loopholes.
▪ At the meetings local residents discussed their fears and their experiences; the police are supposed to respond proactively.
▪ The local residents were bitterly disappointed with the decision.
▪ Kabera said local residents helped soldiers pursue the group, and 11 of them were slain.
▪ In time, the natural succession of plants turned this into an informal landscape which became very popular with the local residents.
▪ Lawrence River, where she takes samples from polluted water and instructs local residents in environmental sciences.
▪ There had been opposition from local residents.
▪ Schapira raised four points: the artist was chosen without being subjected to a competition; local residents were not consulted.
school
▪ A number depend upon special arrangements with one or more local schools, in either the state or the independent sector.
▪ One of the most widely available resources are adult-education classes run by local school districts or community colleges.
▪ Will the Secretary of State now admit that he intends to privatise part of the local schools inspectorate?
▪ When local schools start this fall, the museum will offer tours for students, he added.
▪ They will then be able to offer advice and first hand experience when parents inquire about good local schools.
▪ State law, however, gives control of instruction to local school boards.
▪ The travellers paid eighteen thousand pounds for the site and had hoped to settle down and send their children to local schools.
▪ But as oil reserves dwindled over the past decade, local school property taxes doubled to help make up the difference.
service
▪ Some courts have a specialist probation officer who promptly channels those suspected of having mental health problems into the local service.
▪ Illiterates have no hope at all of calculating the expense of local service, let alone long-distance calls.
▪ Your local health authority will be able to give you advice on local services or your doctor can advise you.
▪ Other for-sale-by-owner Internet firms only provided local service, he said.
▪ The need for specialised local services is very dependent upon provision by other groups in the area.
▪ Tourist offices can suggest local services.
▪ P.S. Enclosed is an important leaflet highlighting local service telephone numbers for use during normal working hours.
▪ These councils would assess local needs, contribute to local service plans within the overall strategic plan and monitor local service provision.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
at local/state/national etc level
▪ Bureaucracy, long absent from the country, was making a rapid return, both at central and at local levels.
▪ Even the left-wing parties that may yet form the government have a record of economic reform at state level.
▪ First, of course, there really does need to be a range of choices available at local level.
▪ He believes everyone has ideas worthy of attention and that earth-saving decisions are best made at local level.
▪ In keeping with the rank-and-file strength of the movement, however, pressure was applied most effectively at local level.
▪ It has also highlighted the differential at local level.
▪ The decision has generated sheafs of proposed new abortion legislation, pro and anti, at state level.
city/local/country boy
▪ For a local boy to come home, this is truly as good as it gets.
▪ Gary Boyce is a local boy who made it big.
▪ It was then that she noticed a tall blond man busy coaching some young local boys in football.
▪ Joseph must have been a country boy.
▪ Julie was a rich kid who loved to associate with the tougher, more daring local boys.
▪ Once a happy, handsome country boy, Inman has become hardened, cynical, burned out.
▪ They went wild with jubilation as they paid homage to the local boy who made President.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ a local anesthetic
▪ Government control was primarily local until the early part of the century.
▪ Polzeath is our local beach, but there are better surfing beaches further away.
▪ The fire was reported in the local newspaper.
▪ Volunteers like Joyce go round local schools helping children with their reading problems.
▪ You can find all these books in your local library.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Actual speed will vary not only with altitudes but also with local terrain.
▪ Another local mill was known as Furnace Mill.
▪ Ask at your local Social Security office.
▪ It is built of the typical pale Yorkshire brick with local stone dressings.
▪ Some victims of police abuse received compensation in local civil trials.
▪ The food is freshly cooked using local ingredients.
▪ The richest local personality was Dmitrii Alekseevich D'iakov.
▪ These developments often failed because of the limited scale of the local social and economic infrastructure.
II.nounEXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Local 54 of the Hotel Employees' Union
▪ Denver International Airport was built in an area that locals call "Tornado Alley."
▪ If you get lost just ask one of the locals for directions.
▪ The new theaters are attracting crowds of tourists and locals alike.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ But the locals aren't giving up yet.
▪ I began to defend the locals we represented.
▪ Such a day was Saturday, 22 June 1929, Black Saturday to the locals - the day of the influx.
▪ The locals got together with Light Motion for a Sunday workshop and have been in rehearsals all week.
▪ This made it easier for absentee owners to vote than for locals, since locals had to get to the polling station.
▪ With tourist traffic plunging at famous museums and monuments, the locals have lots of newfound elbow room.