adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a flight is bound for London/New York etc (= it is going there )
▪
Johnson boarded a flight bound for Caracas.
a London/New York/Paris etc landmark
▪
Buckingham Palace is a London Landmark.
a new age (= a time when things are better than they were in the past )
▪
Supporters see the coming season as the dawning of a new age for the club.
a new beginning
▪
The country needed a new government and a new beginning.
a new breed of
▪
a new breed of international criminal
a new concept
▪
Part of a teacher’s job is to introduce new concepts to students.
a new democracy
▪
They are facing many of the same problems that all new democracies experience.
a new discovery
▪
New discoveries are being made all the time.
a new edition
▪
The new edition of the dictionary includes a CD-ROM.
a new era
▪
The talks signalled a new era of cooperation between the two countries.
a new moon (= a very thin moon which is just starting to get bigger )
▪
It was twilight and a new moon was rising.
a new phenomenon
▪
The idea that we may be able to live forever is is not a new phenomenon.
a new scheme
▪
The new scheme aims to reduce street crime by 30%.
a new stage
▪
It marked the beginning of a new stage in my life.
a new term
▪
Are you looking forward to the new term?
a new town (= one of several towns built in Britain since 1946 )
▪
The design of Milton Keynes and other new towns proved unpopular.
a new type
▪
These architects felt the time had come for a new type of public building.
a new version
▪
There has been an outcry over a new version of the world’s most popular ballet.
a new word
▪
Computer technology has brought many new words into our language.
a New York/London etc accent
▪
The woman had a Chicago accent.
a new/cruel/unexpected/strange etc twist
▪
The robbery took a deadly new twist as the robber pulled out a gun.
▪
an unexpected twist in the plot
a new/different dimension
▪
The size of the bombs gave a new dimension to the terrorists’ campaign.
a new/different identity
▪
He avoided arrest by adopting a new identity.
a new/different perspective
▪
I like the programme because it gives you a different perspective on world news.
a new/different/fresh/alternative approach
▪
a new approach to pollution control
a new/fresh outlook (= new and interesting )
▪
I saw Helen last week and she seemed to have a fresh outlook on life.
a new/fresh page (= which has not yet been written on )
▪
Start each section of your essay on a new page.
a new/fresh wave of sth
▪
A fresh wave of fighting erupted in the region yesterday.
a new/latest range
▪
Body Blitz is a new range of toiletries specially designed for teenagers.
a new/recent migrant
▪
Some of the recent migrants have returned to their homes as the fighting finished.
a new/record/ten-year etc high
▪
The price of oil reached a new high this week.
a recent/new survey
▪
According to a recent survey, students buy an average of 11.33 books a year for their courses.
a recent/new trend
▪
He wrote an article attacking many recent trends in education.
add/give/bring a new etc dimension to sth
▪
Digital cameras have added a new dimension to photography.
an exciting new sth
▪
There are many exciting new developments in cancer research.
as good as new (= in perfect condition )
▪
Once the boat’s repaired, it’ll be as good as new .
break new ground (= introduce new and exciting ideas )
▪
His latest movie looks set to break new ground .
Christmas/New Year celebrations
▪
They invited me to join in their Christmas celebrations.
fall to/hit/reach etc a new low (= be worth less than ever before )
▪
The euro has fallen to a new low against the dollar.
Happy New Year (= used as a greeting )
have a new/social etc dimension
▪
Learning a language has an important cultural dimension.
is under new management
▪
The factory is under new management .
latest/new/recent addition
▪
the latest addition to our designer range
made...New Year resolutions
▪
I haven’t made any New Year resolutions – I never stick to them anyway.
New Age traveller
New Age
New Age
▪
the New Age movement
new and exciting
▪
The theme park has many new and exciting rides.
New arrivals
▪
New arrivals were greeted with suspicion.
new economy
▪
As we move into a new economy, trade unions will have to reinvent themselves to stay relevant.
new improved
▪
Our washing powder now has a new improved formula.
new information
▪
The police have received new information about the case.
new legislation
▪
The Government has promised new legislation to deal with the problem.
New Man
new media
new money
new moon
new possibilities
▪
New possibilities lay before him.
new potato
new rich
new school
▪
new school hip hop artists
New Testament
new town
new variant CJD
new wave
▪
a new wave of feminism in the sixties and early seventies
New World
▪
Christopher Columbus’s voyage of discovery to the New World
New Year resolution
▪
I haven’t made any New Year resolutions – I never stick to them anyway.
New Year's Day
New Year's Eve
New Year
▪
We’re going to spend Christmas and the New Year with my parents.
New Year’s Eve
▪
a New Year’s Eve party
New Zealand
New Zealand
New Zealander
new
▪
Most firms are desperate for new clients.
new
▪
The club scene was a whole new experience for me.
new (= not known about before, or not existing before )
▪
A new species of spider has been discovered in a field in Cambridgeshire.
new
▪
Are any of the songs on the album new?
new/different/fresh etc slant
▪
Each article has a slightly different slant on the situation.
▪
Recent events have put a new slant on the president’s earlier comments.
new/modern technology
▪
People have no faith in new technology.
new/modern/up-to-date
▪
The factory has some of the most up-to-date equipment available.
new/raw/fresh recruit (= one who is completely untrained )
▪
Drill sergeants have eight weeks to turn fresh recruits into soldiers.
new/renewed optimism (= optimism that you start to feel again, after you stopped feeling it )
▪
The new leadership has brought renewed optimism.
nice big/new/long etc
▪
a nice long holiday
▪
a nice new car
nothing new
▪
There’s nothing new about this.
open up new vistas
▪
Exchange programs open up new vistas for students.
original/previous/new owner
▪
the club’s new owners
plunged to a new low
▪
Oil prices have plunged to a new low .
revolutionary new
▪
a revolutionary new drug
sb’s old/new address
▪
I’ve only got his old address.
see in the new year (= celebrate the beginning of the year )
▪
Our neighbours invited us round to see in the new year .
somebody new/different/good etc
▪
We need somebody neutral to sort this out.
someone new/different etc
▪
‘When are you planning to hire someone?’ ‘As soon as we find someone suitable.’
something new/old/good etc
▪
It’s a good car, but I’m looking for something newer.
somewhat larger/higher/newer etc
▪
The price is somewhat higher than I expected.
take on a new/extra etc dimension (= develop in a way that is new or different )
▪
Since I met her, my life has taken on a completely different dimension.
take on a new/special etc significance (= start to have it )
▪
Sporting competitions took on a new political significance during the Cold War.
the dawn/dawning of a new era (= the time when something important first begins )
▪
The fall of the Berlin Wall marked the dawn of a new era in Europe.
the new generation (= younger people, especially people who use new ways of doing something )
▪
He is one of the new generation of English players.
the new rich disapproving (= people who have recently become rich and spend a lot of money )
▪
For Russia's new rich, life is a candy store.
the new year (= used to talk about the beginning of the next year )
▪
The report is due at the beginning of the new year.
took...to new heights
▪
They took ice dancing to new heights .
totally new
▪
It’s like learning a totally new language.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
era
▪
The dawn of a new era ?
▪
Karsten shifts in his seat to signal a new era .
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The early weeks of the new era saw far-reaching institutional change throughout the country.
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The new era that's beginning now is one you will never want to end.
▪
In addition to inaugurating a new era of news, PointCast is pioneering an innovative way to advertise on the Net.
▪
However, the landslide victory for reformist political leader president Khatami in 1997 has ushered in a new era of liberalism.
▪
To make money in the new era , follow the flow of information.
generation
▪
He replied that he did, but asked whether I had tried any of the new generation motion detectors.
▪
Without mentors we have to reinvent the wheel each new generation .
▪
This is the new generation , who will run Lothian and maybe all Scotia when Macbeth is dead.
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Chun was the leader of the December 1979 military coup that vaulted a new generation to power.
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This new generation of artists was quick to see the advantages of the, exciting paints.
▪
Aimed at the amateur, this new generation of cameras and film is called the Advanced Photo System.
▪
It is the start of a new generation of gas cookers.
▪
Others argue that the student walkouts will encourage the new generation of Latinos to become more involved in politics.
government
▪
Within a month of an election being called, Britain may find itself with a new government .
▪
Such a pleasure I hope is before us and our posterity under the influence of the new government ....
▪
Dini could resign and still be reappointed as the head of a new government .
▪
In 1945 he was arrested by the new government and tried for collaborating.
▪
Each new government had its own reasons to hate them.
▪
A new government was to be formed.
▪
The widespread destruction and looting carried out by the soldiers further damaged the image of the new government .
home
▪
In October we acquired additional 216,000 new home policies through Cheltenham and Gloucester.
▪
To Athens, the Peloponnesians offered economic assistance to maintain their destitute people, and even a new home within the Peloponnese.
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The couple said they spent more than $ 2, 000 of their own money to build a new home .
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However, if you find you do start to lose fish mysteriously, then find a new home for the Pictus.
▪
Other than that he lived modestly, without flashy cars or new homes .
▪
A building firm is getting rid of properties it took in part-exchange for new homes in a huge sale.
▪
Run the installation file, and the components settle themselves into their new homes on your computer.
idea
▪
An entirely new idea for the running of mills and the organising of the mill-workers.
▪
He developed a business plan, or road map, that was based on a new idea .
▪
This year the Red Cross hope a new idea of buskers across the country will be even more successful.
▪
Writing, now, in the university, writing to try out new ideas , writing to redefine himself.
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Provocation creates an unstable idea so that we may move on from it to a new idea.
▪
Geology entered one of its great periods of exploration, discovery, and new ideas .
▪
Montage is hardly a new idea .
▪
We give a new perspective on the experiences of your husbands and sons, and new ideas on changing the workplace.
job
▪
A total of 378,000 new jobs was expected to be created in 1996 and 1997.
▪
In this way, John was able to combine his leisure interest in cars with a new job .
▪
I was too excited about my new job to stop and think.
▪
Victoria used every trick in the book to undermine Patsy in order to get the new job colleagues knew Patsy had earned.
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The plant should create 400 new jobs by 1995 and 500 by 1997.
▪
Vasconcellos said the thriving California economy has been producing about 300, 000 new jobs a year.
▪
But it is not yet clear what new job opportunities the development will mean.
▪
It helped me make the mental adjustment from the old job to the new job.
law
▪
Infringements of the new law can attract fines of up to £20,000, or a prison sentence of up to five years.
▪
The effect of the new law on high-rise and condominium dwellers is less clear, pending federal action expected later this year.
▪
One the other side of the coin, there are some parents who believe that their LEAs are ignoring the new law .
▪
The group said it was acting quickly because it feared that the new law would have an immediate effect on the Internet.
▪
But Peter Walker, the agriculture minister, opposes the idea of a new law .
▪
Among their complaints: The new law cuts food stamps and bans some federal welfare benefits for some legal immigrants.
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The new laws bring the sewage companies into line with other industries.
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Under the new law , providers and online services are responsible for restricting indecent material or risking criminal prosecution.
legislation
▪
We will introduce new legislation giving stronger powers to deal with cartels.
▪
The robot has been developed in preparation for new legislation which is currently under consideration.
▪
Before new legislation , some sensible shorter-term improvements could be taken.
▪
Describes the rights this new legislation will afford to grandparents and other non-parents.
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The change is partly mechanistic, a response to new legislation , but partly cultural.
▪
It was forced to look at the issue again by the introduction of new legislation .
▪
The issues here are not just related to policies, however, nor to new legislation .
▪
To monitor, advise and produce guidance notes, when appropriate, on all new legislation affecting work of the section.
life
▪
Their former owners are now trying to build new lives abroad.
▪
In addition, the prospect of lower corporate borrowing costs could give new life to the stock market, analysts say.
▪
There is a process of two individuals joining together to form a new life , often personified by children.
▪
I would have a completely new life that was pleasant enough.
▪
In Mary Barton the working-class heroine and her husband go off to the colonies to start a new life .
▪
The plan languished for more than two years, until the spring of 1988, when Jo Owen gave it new life .
▪
Offers of help or sponsorship would give new life to a very forlorn Lancaster - contact Bernie via the FlyPast office.
▪
She plays Beth, a transplanted Los Angeles teen trying to adjust to her new life in a tiny Washington state hamlet.
member
▪
The group only accepts five new members at most in a year.
▪
A central core of keen and well-informed supporters whose enthusiasm, knowledge and confidence will draw new members like a magnet.
▪
The Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society, only four years old, is recruiting about 1,000 new members each month.
▪
Included within the 25-member body were six new members , whilst 15 Ministers retained their former portfolios.
▪
We have done little to consider how new members entering the religious life nowadays can internalize the attitudes they attempted to represent.
owner
▪
He belongs to a new owner .
▪
Wonder if the new owners will invest some of it in signing free agents during the offseason?
▪
The new owners had completely redone the place.
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There they give just the same protection to their new owners as they did to the jellyfish that developed them.
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The new owners are not responsible for that, but when they came in, they ignored us.
▪
So is the new owner completely mad ... Male speaker People have said that already.
▪
The new owner is an international investment firm.
product
▪
Marconi has had to invest heavily in developing new products to keep in step with rivals such as Nortel and Alcatel.
▪
They know it takes time and repeat exposure to get customers to buy new products .
▪
When this has been satisfactorily completed a specification for the new product can be drafted.
▪
If the economy improves, power may shIft to research and development for developing new products .
▪
Surveys to evaluate new product ideas Concept testing.
▪
The new product is shelf stable up to six months and does not require refrigeration.
▪
Prices of new products start at £4.29.
▪
The three planners then turned to how Mike should market test the new product .
school
▪
This in itself created a need for new schools and teachers, and therefore provided a platform for educational innovation.
▪
They have, no doubt, been adapting themselves to their new home, to a different country and to their new school .
▪
A lack of public confidence, Mathews said, has meant no new schools since 1974.
▪
Pray that the Lord would help Robert adjust to his new school .
▪
The first day of a new school year, and already everything seemed old.
▪
The supporters of the new school of thought were not completely victorious.
▪
Government expenditures can reabsorb these resources in the production of guided missiles, military aircraft, and new schools and highways.
system
▪
It was time to test the new system .
▪
There is no local accountability in the new system .
▪
The new system can detect the presence of dangerous but invisible microorganisms like salmonella and e. coil bacteria.
▪
The new system should, it was argued, include family allowances, maternity benefits and provision for widows.
▪
The new system was developed after a lengthy review process, including consultation with industry leaders and other experts.
▪
The specifications were sent to seven suppliers who were invited to bid for the installation of a new system .
▪
And the United States could not create a new system even if it wanted to.
technology
▪
Thirdly, the new technology is having a major impact at work, for a number of reasons.
▪
Meanwhile, new technologies such as personal communications services -- a new generation of cellular phone -- also will spur demand.
▪
To understand the true picture, it is necessary to consider how any new technology incorporating high productivity affects jobs.
▪
The causes are to be found in the interactions of new technologies and new ideologies.
▪
Under this method the new technology was retained, but the workforce was no longer divided for three separate tasks.
▪
Attrition rates, for tanks and aircraft increased greatly, sparking off a debate about the implication of the new technologies .
▪
In addition to its many benefits, the new technology has some potential risks, particularly from the release of genetically engineered microorganisms.
▪
Stations were cathedrals of the new technology .
town
▪
He believes they will win in the new town areas where they already have the local council seats sewn up.
▪
Urban nightmare of the past Small towns were overrun, new towns created.
▪
As mentioned previously, in its unusual level of incomers west Thurso resembles a new town , albeit on a smaller scale.
▪
Shore challenged the regional and new towns policies of the post-war period which had encouraged economic and population dispersal.
▪
A new town charter gives out-of-state property-owners the right to vote in local elections.
▪
No one, he kept arguing, builds a new town with telephone poles.
▪
Hailed as a success story for the planners, for some this new town will remain an old joke.
▪
Many of those services are used by currently incorporated areas, but would not be needed in some new towns .
version
▪
On this, it plans to piggy-back a new version of Discover, called Prime Option.
▪
The new version represents just the fifth major remake of the Corvette in its 44-year history.
▪
The first new version is to be a half-faired cafe racer featuring a small nose fairing and restyled seat unit.
▪
Michael Oxley, R-Ohio, have written a new version of the law that eases the cleanup requirements on polluters.
▪
As distribution is on a module name basis, the addition of a new version causes no further distribution.
▪
As the new version of Navigator goes on sale Friday, Netscape is facing the toughest competition of its young life.
▪
I was promised a new version Agenda, which never arrived.
▪
The new version of the race will place more emphasis on strategy and drafting.
world
▪
Not for him the promise of jam tomorrow or a brave, new world waiting just around the next bank overdraft.
▪
As I begin to uncover a whole new world myself, I see the folly of that snap judgment.
▪
The previous day she had set a new world record in the preliminaries.
▪
One day, Shawn turned over a stone, and oh the excitement of discovering a new world !
▪
Species can, in the new world of the molecules, no longer be seen as absolutes.
▪
They long to find new worlds where freedom is possible.
▪
This isn't so much a brave new world , more a retrained version of the old one.
▪
This is the brave new world of remote work.
year
▪
We are currently considering how the benefits of fund holding can be extended and will make an announcement in the new year .
▪
The key issue for corporate profits in the new year will be economic growth.
▪
Those holding their prices, at least until the new year , include Veuve Clicquot and Perrier-Jouet.
▪
Each year , on January 1, thousands of people make resolutions to welcome in the new year.
▪
I had to be carted off to hospital, so I didn't manage to complete the work until the new year .
▪
The end-of-the-year selling often results in bargains for buyers in the new year .
▪
A new year without Sylvie, Katherine thought with a mixture of guilt and jubilation.
▪
While many other businesses languish in the early days of a new year , gyms and match-makers are likely to be hopping.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
(the) New Age
▪
A publishing company named Lucifer was established in 1922, which distributed the writings to an increasing network of New Age groups.
▪
I mean, you've heard all his New Age stuff about them being soul mates destined for each other.
▪
Johanna likes a lot of New Age music, for instance.
▪
Standard high-tech stuff like ultrasound imaging and the latest hypertension drugs are available along with various New Age prescriptions.
▪
That anecdote, told in Beatrice Hastings' New Age column, seems true to life.
▪
This indicated to her that she was being associated with occult and New Age practitioners, since becoming a registered Aromatherapist.
▪
Yet she is also known for her New Age spiritual writings and teachings about past lives, a higher self and reincarnation.
Happy Birthday/New Year/Christmas etc
▪
A Happy New Year to you.
▪
After midnight neighbours go outside and wish everyone a Happy New Year.
▪
But bookings still rose 41 % from the $ 3. 41 billion posted a year earlier. Happy New Year.
▪
Let's hope that a wet spring will bring green shoots for Roberts and the economy alike. Happy New Year.
▪
That is what Britain needs as we move into what we all want, a really Happy New Year.
a new lease of life
▪
A re-style can provide locks with a new lease of life.
▪
Artistic director Christopher Gable has injected it with a new lease of life and brought it to a completely different audience.
▪
Clearly retirement has given Jean-Luc Sadourny a new lease of life.
▪
For example, somebody may find that working from home injects their career with a new lease of life.
▪
Male speaker It's absolutely wonderful - to be given a new lease of life. you're given a second chance.
▪
Now they are aiming for a new lease of life and further development.
▪
The Chelsea goalkeeper has found a new lease of life at Grimsby since joining them on loan.
▪
The political controversy over the Habre affair has been given a new lease of life.
a whole new ball game
▪
I used to be a teacher, so working in an office is a whole new ball game.
▪
Although not my cup of tea, I must admit Manchester United is a whole new ball game.
▪
Read in studio Still to come on Central News, it's a whole new ball game.
▪
So obviously if he's hidden this one, he's playing a whole new ball game.
brave new world
▪
In the brave new world of the self-employed, homes should not be confused with offices.
▪
It was a brave new world-but one which, a week later, came crashing down.
▪
Opinion polls and focus groups are Stone Age implements in the brave new world of interactivity just down the communications superhighway.
▪
The ascetic modernists' rejection of history in order to create a visionary brave New World was clearly incompatible with the historic pub.
▪
This brave new world of social engineering produces the opposite of community contact.
▪
This is the brave new world of remote work.
▪
This isn't so much a brave new world, more a retrained version of the old one.
▪
This may sound like the conventional wisdom on the brave new world of short-term, contingent jobs.
in a new/different/bad etc light
▪
But, like the National Health Service, education could be seen in a different light .
▪
He found there a country whose characteristics cast the philosophy of birth control in a new light .
▪
I've seen him at a distance, I've seen him in bad light .
▪
I think we both saw young Mr Venn in new lights , and they were neither favorable nor unfavorable, just new.
▪
It makes you think about those sullen high schoolers in a different light , see their lives along a time line.
▪
So let us fantasise, and see industry and agriculture in a new light .
▪
They literally saw the whole world in a new light .
▪
They perch too far away in bad light .
native New Yorker/population/inhabitants etc
▪
Although he was a native New Yorker, like many denizens of that city he had a romantic view of country life.
new arrival
▪
1200 new arrivals , including small children and babies, were left sitting on the pavement outside the embassy.
▪
Gwyn's children, Craig and Laura, are thrilled with the new arrival .
▪
Jim, this is our new arrival , Lyndsay. She'll be taking over from Bob.
▪
And there is the intriguing possibility of a new arrival next season - Joe Montana.
▪
For the media, interferon was a glamorous new arrival on the pharmaceutical scene.
▪
Hall gives a funny and moving account of the misfit schoolchild latching on to the new arrival .
▪
He'd noted that Howard had clammed up as the new arrival appeared.
▪
Mulholland had been saying that the city had surplus water sufficient for only ten thousand new arrivals .
▪
The baby Eagles are sharing the incubation room with some other new arrivals .
▪
The sound of hysterical laughter swept through the new arrivals as they looked at each other.
▪
With the birth less than six weeks away, Jacqui is juggling a hectic schedule between work and planning for the new arrival .
new wave
▪
A new wave of pro-independence demonstrations began in earnest in late 1987.
▪
After each new wave of immigrants became enfranchised, they began electing people of their own background, she said.
▪
Charles was not quite so committed to the new wave .
▪
Each new wave of immigrants gives new targets to old prejudices.
▪
I never thought of us as a punk band, a metal band, or a new wave band.
▪
They crossed the former's tight disco-funk arrangements with witty incisive lyrics more usually associated with new wave bands.
▪
Yet new waves of allegations continued.
new-mown hay/grass etc
new/fresh blood
▪
The firm desperately needs some new blood .
▪
About the time Ed began getting restless, a family-owned firm in the same industry was looking for new blood .
▪
After that, a simple change to a new blood pressure medication solved the problem for good.
▪
Before the old wound Can be healed, there is fresh blood flowing.
▪
It had smelled blood , fresh blood.
▪
That began to change in recent years, as the Academy membership took on new blood .
▪
The new blood testing exercise will cost up to five thousand pounds.
▪
The Treasury, where two ministers were election casualties, receives an infusion of new blood .
▪
Then our heart rate climbs, steadily, until our ears are gulping on the new blood .
new/great/dizzy etc heights
▪
And they all jump on me from great heights till corns on my hand seem like the fringe benefits of delirious joy.
▪
Fried quail reaches new heights in this recipe.
▪
I wave a fluttery wave of inconsequential cheerfulness and close the door, having reached new heights of cynical disinterest.
▪
In spite of a keen desire to reach greater heights , progress is hindered by poor practice methods which make improvement slow and frustrating.
▪
In the Upper Devonian, club mosses and horsetails grew to great heights .
▪
The stock market is soaring to new heights .
▪
Thereafter, the growth of the population reached dizzy heights .
▪
Under his leadership, the radios reached new heights of effectiveness.
pastures new/greener pastures
put a different/new/fresh complexion on sth
▪
It may put a different complexion on things.
▪
To me, the fact that she hasn't been heard of again in seventeen years puts a different complexion on it.
ring in the New Year
see in the New Year
▪
Meanwhile more than 30,000 people will see in the new year squeezed into bed-and-breakfast accommodation.
▪
Most of us of course will be occupied seeing in the New Year.
▪
Scott Base was the first occupied place in the world to see in the new year.
▪
They'd planned to go with Sinatra to his home in the desert to see in the New Year.
spanking new
▪
It was brand, spanking new, not a dent nor scratch on its sleek body.
▪
One of the disadvantages of monthly reviewing schedules is that most instruments arriving at the Guitarist office are brand spanking new.
▪
That he was wearing a spanking new snap-brimmed fedora.
▪
The marina is brand spanking new.
▪
There is a plan to clear the site to make way for a spanking new conference centre.
sth is the new rock 'n' roll
the New Testament
the New World
▪
Chili peppers are native to the New World.
the new rich
the new year
▪
A few weeks ago, many stock market analysts cautioned investors against extravagant expectations for the new year.
▪
And first thing in the New Year he will be going.
▪
As the wrangling has stretched into the new year, Clinton has moved up some in public esteem.
▪
For the new year, job growth is likely to remain sluggish.
▪
He is currently preparing a plan to unlock more working capital by the New Year.
▪
Indeed, there might be little to prevent some of the orders being cancelled when the new year commences.
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Municipalbond investors are bracing for trouble in the New Year.
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She was relieved when the New Year arrived and things returned to normal.
turn over a new leaf
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After being released from jail, Tony decided to turn over a new leaf .
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I know I've done some bad things in the past, but now I'm turning over a new leaf .
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Faldo, perhaps above all, will be hoping to turn over a new leaf .
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Like all fathers, I see fatherhood as a chance to turn over a new leaf .
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Monnett agrees too, so much that he has turned over a new leaf .
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There is no indication that Hollywood is turning over a new leaf , free of bloodstains.
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We urge them to turn over a new leaf .
you can't teach an old dog new tricks
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
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After the divorce, she went off to Canada to start a new life.
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All new employees are given training.
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Apparently there's going to be a brand new "James Bond" movie out in the spring.
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By the time we'd finished painting the boat, it looked as good as new .
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Can the new drugs help her?
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Children who are new to the school may need extra help.
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Do you have Christy's new address?
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Does anyone have any new ideas?
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Don't forget to give me your new address.
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Have you tried that new restaurant on Fourth Street?
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Her lawyers have come up with new evidence that may prove her innocence.
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Hey, I like your jacket - is it new ?
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Human Resources runs an orientation course for anyone who is new here.
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I'd like to get a video camera but I can't afford to buy one new .
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I had to buy a new refrigerator.
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Important new discoveries in the field of radiology may lead to a breakthrough in the treatment of cancer.
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It's a new idea, very unusual, but it just may work.
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It's vital that we find new methods of producing and conserving energy.
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Learning a new language is more difficult for adults.
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Living in a foreign country for a while was a completely new experience.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
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A new woman with two children had been brought in by Jacky in the night.
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Against that background, the new government should proceed expeditiously to make its actions transparent and itself accountable.
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Meanwhile, new subscribers began to flock, like moths scenting pheromones, to the Times.
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The new fund will be more diverse than the Passport fund, since it will invest in both large and smaller companies.
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They hatch very quickly and at the same time a new generation of workers and soldiers emerge from the stored pupae.
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What distinguishes the leader from everyone else is that he takes all of that and makes himself-all new and unique.