I.nounCOLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a central role/part
▪ The report emphasizes the central role of science in society.
a crucial factor/part/element
▪ The cost of the project is the crucial factor.
a part of the equation
▪ The tourist industry is a crucial part of the country’s overall economic equation.
a parting gift (=a gift that you give someone when you leave/say goodbye)
▪ She brought him a parting gift.
a vital part/element
▪ Learning to play with other children is a vital part of growing up.
a vital role/part
▪ Nurses play a vital role in hospitals and surgeries.
act a part/role
▪ She is acting the role of Lady Macbeth six evenings a week.
act a part/role
▪ Stella felt unnatural in their company, as if she was acting a part.
an active part
▪ Our members take an active part in fund-raising.
appear on/take part in a show (=to be a guest on a show)
▪ They were trying to persuade Daniel Radcliffe to appear on the show.
be part of a chain
▪ The hotel is part of the MacDonald chain.
be part of a conspiracy (also take part in a conspiracy)
▪ The jury found that Poindexter was part of a conspiracy to ship arms to Iran.
be part of a plot
▪ These accusations are part of a plot to discredit him.
be part of a scene
▪ Formal receptions were an important part of the social scene.
be part of sb's/sth's charm
▪ The house is a long way from anywhere and that is part of its charm.
bit part
▪ He’s had bit parts in a couple of soaps.
cast sb in a role/a part/the lead
▪ The producer finally cast Finsh in the male lead.
clouds part (=move away from each other)
▪ Suddenly the clouds that covered the moon parted.
component parts/elements etc
▪ We’ve been breaking down the budget into its component parts.
due in part to (=partly because of)
▪ Attendance at the meeting was small, due in part to the absence of teachers.
forms part of
▪ The project forms part of a larger project investigating the history of the cinema.
indispensable part
▪ Mobile phones have become an indispensable part of our lives.
integral part
▪ Vegetables are an integral part of our diet.
major role/part/factor etc
▪ Britain played a major role in the negotiations.
part exchange
▪ The company takes the buyer’s property in part exchange.
part of speech
part of the deal
▪ I got free accommodation as part of the deal.
part of the world
▪ This part of the world was new to her.
play a crucial role/part in sth
▪ Parents play a crucial role in preparing their children for adult life.
play a prominent part/role (in sth)
▪ Mandela played a prominent role in the early years of the ANC.
play a role/part/character etc
▪ Playing a character so different from herself was a challenge.
private parts
spare part
take an active part in sth
▪ Most of the students take an active part in sports.
take part in a competition
▪ Ten schools took part in the competition.
take part in a contest
▪ Twenty-five countries took part in the contest.
take part in a demonstration (also participate in a demonstrationformal)
▪ As many as 400,000 people took part in the demonstration.
take part in a festival (=perform there)
▪ The school choir, which has taken part in the festival since 1980, is rehearsing every day.
take part in a process (also participate in a process)
▪ We encourage our clients to participate in the process at every stage.
take part in a raid
▪ They took part in various raids, including the bombing of Cologne in 1942.
take part in (a) sport
▪ Students are encouraged to take part in a sport of some kind.
take part in an activity (also participate in an activityformal)
▪ The children were encouraged to take part in several different activities.
take part in politics
▪ Young people should be encouraged to take part in politics.
takes...in part exchange
▪ The company takes the buyer’s property in part exchange.
the early part of sth (=near the beginning of an event or period of time)
▪ I was doing quite well in the early part of the race.
tough neighborhood/area/part of town etc
▪ a tough area of Chicago
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
active
▪ However, he is likely to feel much more satisfied if he can take an active part in looking after the plants.
▪ I took but little active part in last row and am thus out of the scrape.
▪ In old age she was troubled by deafness and played little active part in her husband's later political career.
▪ All 48 people who took an active part in last night's exercise were given a New Brighton stick of rock.
▪ We shall play an active part in negotiations on Economic and Monetary Union.
▪ We both play active parts in the life of the village.
▪ It may be just a surface for bacteria or may play a more active part in filtration.
different
▪ The barn owl and kestrel samples examined here were drawn from widely different parts of their global range.
▪ For example, it could be a jigsaw reading, with different group members having access to different parts.
▪ Building materials for peasant houses varied between different parts of the country.
▪ Chaotic mechanisms would serve to maintain the functional independence of different parts of the nervous system.
▪ This takes time, and calls for contributions from different parts of the Office, as well as elsewhere in Whitehall.
▪ Wholesalers in different parts of the country provide the important connection between the farmer-breeder and restaurants or markets.
▪ People are so different in all parts of the world.
▪ The standard course comes in three books of case studies covering a variety of business activities in different parts of the world.
early
▪ In this early part of the reign there were two periods of fighting.
▪ Its name, Morrisonville, dated from the early part of the nineteenth century.
▪ The earlier part of the year was the crabbing season.
▪ Textile finds across Eurasia from the earlier part of the Neolithic are almost uniformly of plant fibres, particularly flax and hemp.
▪ And so the early part of the night passed quite quietly.
▪ In the early part of 1939 I was still a pacifist.
▪ In the early part of this century a calendar of the Abbey muniments was produced.
▪ That was some time during the early part of the morning.
essential
▪ Learning pro-social behaviour is an essential part of controlling aggressive and violent reactions.
▪ An essential part of its history is that of ships, convoys and the conquest of distant oceans.
▪ Sad, moving scenes are an essential part of lachrymose drama.
▪ Want creation is thus an essential part of a modern technologically-based economy.
▪ She considers thin distinction between the pure and the impure an essential part of social order.
▪ Again, as we will see, this kind of manoeuvre plays an essential part in the Roslin cloning procedure.
▪ People left essential parts of themselves on the shore.
great
▪ On the greater part of the body the spots are grouped in rosettes.
▪ During the greater part of each contest, the two are settled in a squat position, measuring each other.
▪ The greater part is given over to the well in which the ice was deposited.
▪ We have also left the enemy all our dead and the greater part of our severely wounded.
▪ Her objective was to acquire Transylvania, and she now at once invaded that country and quickly occupied the greater part of it.
▪ The legend of Lalla Haguza enlivened a great part of our childhood.
▪ It is these that make up the greater part of the transcribed conversations in Appendix 2 of this book.
▪ For this reason, the great part of reports relating to warfare in this period concern sieges.
hard
▪ The harder parts gave a much more satisfactory finish with clean shiny cutter marks even in the interlocking grain.
▪ Now comes the hard part: making the deal work for both sides.
▪ The hard part is sorting the good memories from the bad.
▪ In fact, the hardest part is getting the printer out of the box.
▪ Applying method to job applications Initially the aim is to get called for interview, and this is the hardest part.
▪ Digging a pit in these woods is the hard part.
▪ The skeletal elements of those with hard parts are fine, often branching elements called spicules.
▪ The hard part would be working it into her schedule.
important
▪ An important part of the notion of interdependence is reciprocity: the desire not to exploit one's partner too much.
▪ Beal maintains victims should be an important part of the process, but says they have no special legal status.
▪ In particular, we consider two especially important parts of your work: the beginning and the end.
▪ Community interest will lead to self-reliant integrated development with science and technology playing an important part.
▪ Mortgage rescue schemes are an important part of that initiative.
▪ Budgeting is an important part of the management control process in any organization.
▪ Effective and reliable handwriting recognition will necessarily form an important part of this new technology.
▪ Dominic said that for him the most important part of foreign travel was meeting the people.
integral
▪ It enables borders to be woven as an integral part of the carpet allowing continuation of the design without mitred corners.
▪ Coining phrases was an integral part of the mystique of the rhythm &038; blues deejays.
▪ He's young, supremely talented and an integral part of a successful, high profile side.
▪ Fear is an integral part of individual and organizational life.
▪ Petrofabric evaluation should therefore form an integral part of any study of basin evolution.
▪ As she found out, wrecks were an integral part of Trepassey life.
▪ It is envisaged that much of the assessment will be done by teachers as an integral part of their normal classroom work.
▪ It has shown that it must be an integral part of any peace process.
large
▪ Checheno-Ingushetia was abolished, and a large part of the Ingushi lands had been ceded to North Ossetia and repopulated by Ossetes.
▪ A large part of the higher expenses was an $ 11. 6 million write-down of office property in Tampa, Fla.
▪ They argue that the type of regime establishes constraints and determines in large part the paths to democracy.
▪ Environment has played a large part in making him the notorious character he is today.
▪ It has lost a large part of its voice in the control of its own destiny.
▪ And being able to make decisions is also a large part of the fun and satisfaction in being your own boss.
▪ So did a large part of the local population, including Morag Paterson.
▪ The control of development is in large part internal and affective.
major
▪ It follows that the duty can not be expected to play a major part in controlling managerialist tendencies.
▪ Outside of food and energy, inflation moderated in every other major part of the consumer price index.
▪ A levy of some sort is essential, so that the industry plays a major part in all training.
▪ It held together with the engine, the rest of the fuselage separating which took him out of the major part of the fire.
▪ The major part of teaching, motivating and assessing what has been learned should take place outside the diabetic clinic.
▪ It helped to bring the system into disrepute and played a major part in the eventual breakdown of the Plowden structure.
▪ Which of the many recent changes played the major part in the university disturbances of the early 1860s is unclear.
▪ That same report concluded that high income elasticities and low price elasticities had played a major part in this observed growth.
other
▪ The answer does not lie in saying that London has some advantages that other parts of the country do not enjoy.
▪ This problem of the representativeness of our study can be overcome by repeating our study in other parts of the country.
▪ The restoration process lasted for several years, extending to other parts of the station, and eventually cost around £10m.
▪ In other parts of the world, the same needs arise but they are met by different structures.
▪ Three remain free-standing; the other as part of federations.
▪ The seat is elm and the other parts are made of various fruit woods; mine is of cherry.
▪ Part of her was wishing they would hurry up and the other part was hoping they'd take for ever!
▪ The other part can not be used to do work.
small
▪ Moreover, Kalmar contains but a small part of the total final assembly facilities within the Volvo enterprise.
▪ Our concern is with the fire service and doing our small part to help that out.
▪ The play had done quite well and he was noticed in the small part.
▪ The Sunday Night Supper constituted a small part of the Georgetown set in embryonic form.
▪ Artists can be at a disadvantage in group exhibitions as only a small part of their activity can be seen.
▪ It is under-inclusive because teenagers pose only a small part of the drunken driving problem in this Nation.
▪ In the north, only a small part of Sutherland remained to be surveyed but the area was relatively inaccessible.
▪ A small part of the Large Cloud of Magellan extends into Mensa, but otherwise there is absolutely nothing here of interest.
spare
▪ No sound had emerged from it for six months: spare parts were hard to get, Dynmouth Hi-Fi Boutique informed him.
▪ He stood looking like a spare part, apparently waiting to be asked to sit down.
▪ These exceptions are significant for manufacturers and suppliers of spare parts.
▪ A shop should also be able to demonstrate the availability of spare parts for the board you have selected.
▪ Key resources are technical personnel and aircraft spare parts which account for the largest share of the maintenance budget.
▪ Approval will be given for spare parts for ships, naval helicopters and naval planes.
▪ The sheer cost of trained staff and the difficulties with obtaining spare parts are two indications of the absurdity of the idea.
▪ The air force divides responsibility for spare parts among seven centres.
vital
▪ Ask about Talkabout Nuclear power is frequently misunderstood but the truth is it plays a vital part in our everyday life.
▪ Mr Trimble is a vital part ofthe peace process.
▪ To begin to decrease this isolation is therefore a vital part of the stress-reduction programme.
▪ The home side gradually began to look interested, with the pace of Paul Bennett playing a vital part on the flank.
▪ Learning to play with other children and to form close friendships with some of them is a vital part of growing up.
▪ But experts now believe that the genes we inherit also play a vital part.
▪ The Berkeley Square Gallery, for example, maintains a second outlet in Tokyo, as a vital part of its operations.
▪ The result amazed them: the Il-4 killed the mice by shutting off a vital part of their immune system.
■ NOUN
body
▪ There he will create a towering bronze armature to which various body parts, heroic in size, will be affixed.
▪ The largest body part was a knee.
▪ Forearm training is frequently omitted because of all the work the forearms do while training other body parts.
▪ The company says there is no limit to the body parts it could grow in its lab.
▪ The 1995 team saw body parts strewn about callously by the robbers in their mad quest for anything of value.
▪ On the kitchen table are strewn the body parts of a dismantled wooden Easter bunny.
▪ Measuring body parts First, write on a piece of paper how you view yourself.
▪ The entertainment industry is, of course, rife with synthetic body parts, including hair.
■ VERB
become
▪ Could he really let his only child become a part of this family?
▪ The old man had become part of city.
▪ Malcolm Mann, for example, could have become part of the disgruntled class when he was laid off at age 55.
▪ That magnificent body had become part of hers.
▪ Once vice-chancellors start to think the unthinkable, then the issue becomes part of the agenda and it becomes harder to retreat.
▪ Charter of fundamental rights: After a battle spearheaded by Britain the charter will not become part of the Nice treaty.
▪ It becomes part of the establishment.
form
▪ If they do not feel easy about this physical closeness that, too, will form part of the communication.
▪ It is in this way a world view, of which psychoanalysis forms an important part.
▪ The responsibility statement forms part of the Investment Overview.
▪ Advice on monitoring the effectiveness of the procedures will form part of the Code of Practice.
▪ Assessment forms a large part of historical work.
▪ The Court of Appeal held that the oral statement overrode the exclusion clause which therefore did not form part of the contract.
▪ These reports will then go with the pleadings and form part of the documents for use of the trial judge.
▪ These cells form part of the immune system and help to prevent the body from getting diseases.
play
▪ Duty done, the vodka was playing a prominent part in his triumph.
▪ Sure, the Pentium chip plays a part, but other components provide the big difference.
▪ A little girl playing the part of Mary was asked by the teacher to imagine how Mary would be feeling in the stables.
▪ No longer does service play a large part in their future plans.
▪ This means choosing the right variety can play an important part in making savings further into the season.
▪ This is not to suggest that ethnicity did not play any part in the front's activities.
▪ Mayr passed around a still of the 6-year-old Herbert Halbik, who played the part so unforgettably.
▪ Musicals play a major part in the Forum line-up.
take
▪ But the vote has been declared invalid because fewer than half the parents took part in the ballot.
▪ About 34 percent of those who took part in the recent survey said they use a commercial online service.
▪ So far 4,411 retailers with 10,789 shops, including some major chains, have signed up to take part in the scheme.
▪ Pimm began asking himself: Can we assemble a stable ecosystem by taking in the parts at random?
▪ Customers at each of the Bank's 750 branches took part in the survey.
▪ No wild-talking hippies had taken part in the planning.
▪ No-one knew how many bands would take part in each contest until it was all over.
▪ We will take the parts remaining from this one and combine it with that one.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a parting kiss/gift/glance etc
▪ And every couple receives a case of Lygon Arms' dry white wine or claret as a parting gift.
▪ Right: Jeff Lowe receives a parting gift from Chris Bonington.
▪ They would send him home that very day and every man present would give him a parting gift to enrich him.
bolt-on part/component/extra
discretion is the better part of valour
for the most part
▪ Ethnic minorities have struggled to retain their cultural identity, and have for the most part succeeded.
▪ For the most part, people seemed pretty friendly.
▪ For the most part, she's a fair person.
▪ The cell chemistry of these insects is, for the most part, poorly understood.
▪ You can get good deals there, for the most part
▪ An engaging blend of poetic characterization and deductive reasoning, it was delivered for the most part in a weary monotone.
▪ But for the most part he was a normal teenager who looked with confidence to the world soon to open to him.
▪ Discussion on the petition in Congress was heated and for the most part illogical.
▪ However, they soon comprised, for the most part, Roma children who were denied access to mainstream education.
▪ It had been a year of hardship and self-doubt, but for the most part the new managers had persevered.
▪ The concepts and practices of applied entomology for the most part date from that Stone Age of science.
▪ Various recommendations were advanced for making changes in the operational plan, but for the most part they got nowhere.
greater/more/better etc than the sum of its parts
▪ Or is the organisation more than the sum of its parts?
in large part/measure
▪ Alvin had always made it plain that his company existed in large part to provide work for black dancers.
▪ As it turns out, the fears that govern such organizations derive in large part from invalid or negative core beliefs.
▪ My conception of postmodernist de-differentiation via an aesthetics of desire was also in large part dependent on Lyotard's work.
▪ Realism is now out of fashion, in large part as a consequence of those silly semantic claims.
▪ This continuity can be explained in large part by the nature of the superstructure.
▪ This is due in large part to the national officers and to yourselves and your colleagues.
▪ Whether the high jumper can requalify against stiff competition depends in large part upon the other big change: her takeoff.
part-timer/full-timer
parting of the ways
▪ They did not say whether Smith was fired, but called it an "amicable parting of the ways."
▪ Anyway, Riley, this is the parting of the ways; and you know something?
▪ I fear we are at a parting of the ways.
▪ It was also easier to get new sales jobs after a parting of the ways.
▪ Much of what I have said tonight points towards a parting of the ways.
▪ Then it was the parting of the ways.
▪ This parting of the ways is of the most profound importance.
▪ Was this a more than merely temporary parting of the ways?
parting shot
▪ As Eve was leaving, she couldn't resist a parting shot at Brian: "I never loved you anyway!"
▪ As it will be the best remembered part of your presentation, your parting shot needs to be powerful.
▪ Gilliland, however, had a parting shot to fire in his paper in Astrophysical Journal.
▪ He left with a parting shot at Supervisor Mike Boyd.
▪ He was strong enough now to attribute the man's parting shot about his drawings to sheer malice.
▪ It's no coincidence that it originated in Moscow - this was the Communist old guard's parting shot.
▪ The ultimate parting shot from an ungrateful aircraft that had enjoyed every care and attention.
play a part/role
▪ Although the budget committees guide Congress's actions on spending, every committee plays a role.
▪ Hart clearly played a role in the decision to change admission standards.
▪ Men now play a larger part in looking after their children.
▪ Our goal is to make sure everyone plays a part and shares in the credit.
▪ Schneider played a key role in getting the organization started.
▪ The most effective learning occurs when the child is allowed to play a more active role in the learning process.
▪ The Secretary of State played a leading role in the government's successful foreign policy.
▪ Together with the police everyone can play a part in improving the security of their neighborhood.
▪ But big-city gangsters also play a part.
▪ By speaking out about envy between women, comedy can play a part in helping us to heal it in ourselves.
▪ He was six now and understood that I had played a role in his parents separation.
▪ Luck has to play a part in it.
▪ Sure, the Pentium chip plays a part, but other components provide the big difference.
▪ The New Man rejects traditional roles of parenthood and likes to play a part in decision-making.
▪ The researchers said more investigation was needed into whether vaccinations or pesticides played a part.
▪ Therefore, both over-confidence and under-confidence may play a part in creating an environment in which accidents happen more readily.
supporting part/role/actor etc
▪ At a crucial moment, the United States played an important supporting role.
▪ Benicio Del Toro won the best supporting actor prize for Traffic.
▪ But the chief joy despite several eye-catching supporting roles remains watching Courtenay milk the script for all its worth.
▪ He felt the other two were satisfied to play supporting roles to Gedge and to a lesser extent, himself.
▪ Hopper won a supporting role in that film too.
▪ Its most unarguable successes are in the main supporting roles.
▪ The meats are unfailingly tender and flavorful, and the stuffed tomatoes deserve a Tony Award for best supporting actor.
▪ The three supporting roles are all superbly played.
working parts
▪ He had, Edouard saw, a technical mind, and loved to see how working parts fitted together.
▪ It still retains all its working parts and would require only minimum repairs to put it into full working order.
▪ The working parts of a digital watch.
▪ The neo-biological approach is to assemble software from working parts, while continuously testing and correcting the software as it grows.
▪ They do not, at least by biological standards, have intricate working parts.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Part of the research program involved interviewing teenagers in inner-city areas.
▪ Part One ends with the death of the hero's father.
▪ All our replacement parts are guaranteed, if you have your car serviced with us each year.
▪ Check inside the box to see if all the parts are there.
▪ Did you understand the part about switching the modem speed?
▪ I'll sing the bass part if you want.
▪ I've finished the first part of my thesis.
▪ Jane Austen's 'Pride and Prejudice', adapted for radio in six parts
▪ Malaria is still common in many parts of Africa.
▪ Mix one part milk with two parts flour and stir.
▪ Organizing the party was easy, the hardest part was getting my parents to agree to it.
▪ She spent the early part of her life in Barcelona.
▪ The part of Cyrano was played by Gerard Depardieu.
▪ The director has given us until tomorrow to learn our parts.
▪ This is the widest part of the river.
▪ What part of Russia are you from?
▪ When you have filled in the form, keep the top part and send the other part to the bank.
▪ Where does this part go?
▪ Which part of your job do you enjoy most?
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A quarter of all 16-18 year olds are now taking part in these schemes.
▪ And if later some one disposes of a record in some other way no part of the royalty can be recovered.
▪ But people in these parts name their children after their favorite stock-car racer, and they're proud to tell you so.
▪ Gradually you should be able to phase out the tangible reinforcers when tantrums are no longer a major part of her repertoire.
▪ Isetan, however, said the filing was part of a dispute over control of real estate in three key markets.
▪ Morales' murder is part of a wave of killings since Figueroa took office.
▪ Most have a core of solid businesses that ensure that at least parts of the firm are making serious money.
▪ Sentimental attachment to some geographic part of the world is not part of the system.
II.verbCOLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
slightly
▪ Make sure that your lips are slightly parted and that your jaw is relaxed.
▪ And when Merrill awoke the following morning her lips were slightly parted to receive his dream-kiss.
▪ His lips were slightly parted, and she could neither see nor hear the thin whisper of breath.
■ NOUN
crowd
▪ Ever stage-dived and found the crowd parting like the red sea?
▪ With no words spoken the crowd parted before the old man, allowing him immediate access to the bar.
▪ The crowd had parted to let Harriet through to the centre of the square.
▪ Then, as she watched, the crowd parted and a man came towards her.
▪ The gunman looked around him wildly and the crowd parted as he darted up a narrow alleyway.
▪ The crowd had parted to let them through, and Kathleen's fear for herself vanished as she took in the scene.
▪ The crowd parted before them and they stared, unbelieving, at the three girls on the bloodstained pink marble floor.
death
▪ It had taken nothing less than death to part these men.
▪ Till death did they part, my customer and his bonds.
▪ This is how you talk about your wife, the woman you vowed to love and cherish till death does you part?
hair
▪ She had dark-brown hair, parted in the middle, and wore a headdress of yellow felt.
▪ Margarett had pulled back her hair rather severely and parted it on the side.
▪ His hair is black and parted on the side.
▪ His long blond hair was parted in the center.
▪ My fair hair was meticulously parted.
▪ His golden hair was parted down the middle, and he wore a gold ring on his right hand.
▪ Within was the mummy of an old woman whose long, grey hair had been parted in the middle.
▪ Russell was thirty-five, a short man with slicked-down hair parted in the middle.
lip
▪ It was a second or two before it opened and when it did her lips parted silently.
▪ He saw Mayli, and stopped, his eyes widening, his lips parting as if he were about to speak.
▪ Her eyes were open and staring, her mouth open too, lips just parted, as though mid-breath.
▪ Mala was motionless, eyes wide, lips parted a little, as if hypnotized.
▪ Her mouth was under his, her lips parting beneath the flickering ecstasy of his tongue.
▪ She had pale crimped hair over her temples, and her lips were parted to reveal large, even teeth.
middle
▪ She had dark-brown hair, parted in the middle, and wore a headdress of yellow felt.
▪ His golden hair was parted down the middle, and he wore a gold ring on his right hand.
▪ Within was the mummy of an old woman whose long, grey hair had been parted in the middle.
▪ Russell was thirty-five, a short man with slicked-down hair parted in the middle.
▪ His dark hair, long and straight, was parted in the middle.
▪ Her hair was parted in the middle and drawn back from a round, pretty face.
▪ She had freckles, level gray eyes, a round nose, and straight dark blond hair parted in the middle.
▪ At six foot six, Tesla was a commanding figure, clean-cut and wiry, his jet-black hair parted in the middle.
money
▪ Whether these compromises are acceptable or not will be up to those of us parting with our money!
▪ Under that compulsion they parted with their money.
▪ If you're dealing with an overseas provider, look into how it is regulated before you part with any money.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a fool and his money are soon parted
a parting kiss/gift/glance etc
▪ And every couple receives a case of Lygon Arms' dry white wine or claret as a parting gift.
▪ Right: Jeff Lowe receives a parting gift from Chris Bonington.
▪ They would send him home that very day and every man present would give him a parting gift to enrich him.
bolt-on part/component/extra
discretion is the better part of valour
for the most part
▪ Ethnic minorities have struggled to retain their cultural identity, and have for the most part succeeded.
▪ For the most part, people seemed pretty friendly.
▪ For the most part, she's a fair person.
▪ The cell chemistry of these insects is, for the most part, poorly understood.
▪ You can get good deals there, for the most part
▪ An engaging blend of poetic characterization and deductive reasoning, it was delivered for the most part in a weary monotone.
▪ But for the most part he was a normal teenager who looked with confidence to the world soon to open to him.
▪ Discussion on the petition in Congress was heated and for the most part illogical.
▪ However, they soon comprised, for the most part, Roma children who were denied access to mainstream education.
▪ It had been a year of hardship and self-doubt, but for the most part the new managers had persevered.
▪ The concepts and practices of applied entomology for the most part date from that Stone Age of science.
▪ Various recommendations were advanced for making changes in the operational plan, but for the most part they got nowhere.
greater/more/better etc than the sum of its parts
▪ Or is the organisation more than the sum of its parts?
in large part/measure
▪ Alvin had always made it plain that his company existed in large part to provide work for black dancers.
▪ As it turns out, the fears that govern such organizations derive in large part from invalid or negative core beliefs.
▪ My conception of postmodernist de-differentiation via an aesthetics of desire was also in large part dependent on Lyotard's work.
▪ Realism is now out of fashion, in large part as a consequence of those silly semantic claims.
▪ This continuity can be explained in large part by the nature of the superstructure.
▪ This is due in large part to the national officers and to yourselves and your colleagues.
▪ Whether the high jumper can requalify against stiff competition depends in large part upon the other big change: her takeoff.
part-timer/full-timer
parting of the ways
▪ They did not say whether Smith was fired, but called it an "amicable parting of the ways."
▪ Anyway, Riley, this is the parting of the ways; and you know something?
▪ I fear we are at a parting of the ways.
▪ It was also easier to get new sales jobs after a parting of the ways.
▪ Much of what I have said tonight points towards a parting of the ways.
▪ Then it was the parting of the ways.
▪ This parting of the ways is of the most profound importance.
▪ Was this a more than merely temporary parting of the ways?
parting shot
▪ As Eve was leaving, she couldn't resist a parting shot at Brian: "I never loved you anyway!"
▪ As it will be the best remembered part of your presentation, your parting shot needs to be powerful.
▪ Gilliland, however, had a parting shot to fire in his paper in Astrophysical Journal.
▪ He left with a parting shot at Supervisor Mike Boyd.
▪ He was strong enough now to attribute the man's parting shot about his drawings to sheer malice.
▪ It's no coincidence that it originated in Moscow - this was the Communist old guard's parting shot.
▪ The ultimate parting shot from an ungrateful aircraft that had enjoyed every care and attention.
supporting part/role/actor etc
▪ At a crucial moment, the United States played an important supporting role.
▪ Benicio Del Toro won the best supporting actor prize for Traffic.
▪ But the chief joy despite several eye-catching supporting roles remains watching Courtenay milk the script for all its worth.
▪ He felt the other two were satisfied to play supporting roles to Gedge and to a lesser extent, himself.
▪ Hopper won a supporting role in that film too.
▪ Its most unarguable successes are in the main supporting roles.
▪ The meats are unfailingly tender and flavorful, and the stuffed tomatoes deserve a Tony Award for best supporting actor.
▪ The three supporting roles are all superbly played.
working parts
▪ He had, Edouard saw, a technical mind, and loved to see how working parts fitted together.
▪ It still retains all its working parts and would require only minimum repairs to put it into full working order.
▪ The working parts of a digital watch.
▪ The neo-biological approach is to assemble software from working parts, while continuously testing and correcting the software as it grows.
▪ They do not, at least by biological standards, have intricate working parts.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Jen's black hair was parted down the middle.
▪ Joe parted the curtains and the sunlight came flooding in.
▪ Sharon and I parted on friendly terms.
▪ She parted the branches with her hands as she moved further into the forest.
▪ She hoped that she and Jonathan would never part.
▪ The crowd parted as Governor Langley walked to the stage.
▪ They parted in a fairly amicable way.
▪ Very gently, he parted the front of her robe.
▪ With a brief hug, they parted.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A few minutes later she parted from him and, weathering a few pleasant glances, went back to her office.
▪ Between the pathologists and police communication was intermittent, for they were parted by more than space.
▪ He lay back and she stretched her body over his, leaning to his mouth and parting his lips with her tongue.
▪ Then she kissed me to show me that we had to part.
▪ They knocked against linked bodies, which parted to let them pass.
III.adverbPHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a fool and his money are soon parted
a parting kiss/gift/glance etc
▪ And every couple receives a case of Lygon Arms' dry white wine or claret as a parting gift.
▪ Right: Jeff Lowe receives a parting gift from Chris Bonington.
▪ They would send him home that very day and every man present would give him a parting gift to enrich him.
bolt-on part/component/extra
discretion is the better part of valour
for the most part
▪ Ethnic minorities have struggled to retain their cultural identity, and have for the most part succeeded.
▪ For the most part, people seemed pretty friendly.
▪ For the most part, she's a fair person.
▪ The cell chemistry of these insects is, for the most part, poorly understood.
▪ You can get good deals there, for the most part
▪ An engaging blend of poetic characterization and deductive reasoning, it was delivered for the most part in a weary monotone.
▪ But for the most part he was a normal teenager who looked with confidence to the world soon to open to him.
▪ Discussion on the petition in Congress was heated and for the most part illogical.
▪ However, they soon comprised, for the most part, Roma children who were denied access to mainstream education.
▪ It had been a year of hardship and self-doubt, but for the most part the new managers had persevered.
▪ The concepts and practices of applied entomology for the most part date from that Stone Age of science.
▪ Various recommendations were advanced for making changes in the operational plan, but for the most part they got nowhere.
greater/more/better etc than the sum of its parts
▪ Or is the organisation more than the sum of its parts?
in large part/measure
▪ Alvin had always made it plain that his company existed in large part to provide work for black dancers.
▪ As it turns out, the fears that govern such organizations derive in large part from invalid or negative core beliefs.
▪ My conception of postmodernist de-differentiation via an aesthetics of desire was also in large part dependent on Lyotard's work.
▪ Realism is now out of fashion, in large part as a consequence of those silly semantic claims.
▪ This continuity can be explained in large part by the nature of the superstructure.
▪ This is due in large part to the national officers and to yourselves and your colleagues.
▪ Whether the high jumper can requalify against stiff competition depends in large part upon the other big change: her takeoff.
part-timer/full-timer
parting of the ways
▪ They did not say whether Smith was fired, but called it an "amicable parting of the ways."
▪ Anyway, Riley, this is the parting of the ways; and you know something?
▪ I fear we are at a parting of the ways.
▪ It was also easier to get new sales jobs after a parting of the ways.
▪ Much of what I have said tonight points towards a parting of the ways.
▪ Then it was the parting of the ways.
▪ This parting of the ways is of the most profound importance.
▪ Was this a more than merely temporary parting of the ways?
parting shot
▪ As Eve was leaving, she couldn't resist a parting shot at Brian: "I never loved you anyway!"
▪ As it will be the best remembered part of your presentation, your parting shot needs to be powerful.
▪ Gilliland, however, had a parting shot to fire in his paper in Astrophysical Journal.
▪ He left with a parting shot at Supervisor Mike Boyd.
▪ He was strong enough now to attribute the man's parting shot about his drawings to sheer malice.
▪ It's no coincidence that it originated in Moscow - this was the Communist old guard's parting shot.
▪ The ultimate parting shot from an ungrateful aircraft that had enjoyed every care and attention.
play a part/role
▪ Although the budget committees guide Congress's actions on spending, every committee plays a role.
▪ Hart clearly played a role in the decision to change admission standards.
▪ Men now play a larger part in looking after their children.
▪ Our goal is to make sure everyone plays a part and shares in the credit.
▪ Schneider played a key role in getting the organization started.
▪ The most effective learning occurs when the child is allowed to play a more active role in the learning process.
▪ The Secretary of State played a leading role in the government's successful foreign policy.
▪ Together with the police everyone can play a part in improving the security of their neighborhood.
▪ But big-city gangsters also play a part.
▪ By speaking out about envy between women, comedy can play a part in helping us to heal it in ourselves.
▪ He was six now and understood that I had played a role in his parents separation.
▪ Luck has to play a part in it.
▪ Sure, the Pentium chip plays a part, but other components provide the big difference.
▪ The New Man rejects traditional roles of parenthood and likes to play a part in decision-making.
▪ The researchers said more investigation was needed into whether vaccinations or pesticides played a part.
▪ Therefore, both over-confidence and under-confidence may play a part in creating an environment in which accidents happen more readily.
supporting part/role/actor etc
▪ At a crucial moment, the United States played an important supporting role.
▪ Benicio Del Toro won the best supporting actor prize for Traffic.
▪ But the chief joy despite several eye-catching supporting roles remains watching Courtenay milk the script for all its worth.
▪ He felt the other two were satisfied to play supporting roles to Gedge and to a lesser extent, himself.
▪ Hopper won a supporting role in that film too.
▪ Its most unarguable successes are in the main supporting roles.
▪ The meats are unfailingly tender and flavorful, and the stuffed tomatoes deserve a Tony Award for best supporting actor.
▪ The three supporting roles are all superbly played.
working parts
▪ He had, Edouard saw, a technical mind, and loved to see how working parts fitted together.
▪ It still retains all its working parts and would require only minimum repairs to put it into full working order.
▪ The working parts of a digital watch.
▪ The neo-biological approach is to assemble software from working parts, while continuously testing and correcting the software as it grows.
▪ They do not, at least by biological standards, have intricate working parts.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ In a book that is part memoir and part sociological study, Wolf writes about the agonizing job girls face becoming women.
▪ Taking a cooking bowl from the side he part filled it from the water jar and set it down on the ring.
▪ The refusal seems part economic, part philosophic.
IV.adjectivePHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a fool and his money are soon parted
discretion is the better part of valour
for the most part
▪ Ethnic minorities have struggled to retain their cultural identity, and have for the most part succeeded.
▪ For the most part, people seemed pretty friendly.
▪ For the most part, she's a fair person.
▪ The cell chemistry of these insects is, for the most part, poorly understood.
▪ You can get good deals there, for the most part
▪ An engaging blend of poetic characterization and deductive reasoning, it was delivered for the most part in a weary monotone.
▪ But for the most part he was a normal teenager who looked with confidence to the world soon to open to him.
▪ Discussion on the petition in Congress was heated and for the most part illogical.
▪ However, they soon comprised, for the most part, Roma children who were denied access to mainstream education.
▪ It had been a year of hardship and self-doubt, but for the most part the new managers had persevered.
▪ The concepts and practices of applied entomology for the most part date from that Stone Age of science.
▪ Various recommendations were advanced for making changes in the operational plan, but for the most part they got nowhere.
greater/more/better etc than the sum of its parts
▪ Or is the organisation more than the sum of its parts?
part-timer/full-timer
parting of the ways
▪ They did not say whether Smith was fired, but called it an "amicable parting of the ways."
▪ Anyway, Riley, this is the parting of the ways; and you know something?
▪ I fear we are at a parting of the ways.
▪ It was also easier to get new sales jobs after a parting of the ways.
▪ Much of what I have said tonight points towards a parting of the ways.
▪ Then it was the parting of the ways.
▪ This parting of the ways is of the most profound importance.
▪ Was this a more than merely temporary parting of the ways?
play a part/role
▪ Although the budget committees guide Congress's actions on spending, every committee plays a role.
▪ Hart clearly played a role in the decision to change admission standards.
▪ Men now play a larger part in looking after their children.
▪ Our goal is to make sure everyone plays a part and shares in the credit.
▪ Schneider played a key role in getting the organization started.
▪ The most effective learning occurs when the child is allowed to play a more active role in the learning process.
▪ The Secretary of State played a leading role in the government's successful foreign policy.
▪ Together with the police everyone can play a part in improving the security of their neighborhood.
▪ But big-city gangsters also play a part.
▪ By speaking out about envy between women, comedy can play a part in helping us to heal it in ourselves.
▪ He was six now and understood that I had played a role in his parents separation.
▪ Luck has to play a part in it.
▪ Sure, the Pentium chip plays a part, but other components provide the big difference.
▪ The New Man rejects traditional roles of parenthood and likes to play a part in decision-making.
▪ The researchers said more investigation was needed into whether vaccinations or pesticides played a part.
▪ Therefore, both over-confidence and under-confidence may play a part in creating an environment in which accidents happen more readily.