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formes avec ou sans -ing be + -ing / have been + -ing / modal + be + -ing / adjectif / segment / nom / gérondif
The Guardian p. 8 5.5.2005
The Guardian p. 11 12.2.2007
The Guardian p. 32 13.1.2007
The Guardian p. 15 15.4.2006
1 - Segment en be + -ing : are planning to curb their holiday spending this year. Nom en -ing : spending. Segment participe en -ing, encadré par des virgules : , making it a challenging shopping season for U.S. retailers , Adjectif (s) : challenging + shopping. GN en fonction adjectivale - holiday buying - dans le GN complexe a holiday buying survey.
1 - NEW YORK (Reuters) - Most Americans are planning to curb their holiday spending this year, making it a challenging shopping season for U.S. retailers, according to a holiday buying survey by The NPD Group. Survey: U.S. to Rein in Holiday Spending, R, Tue Oct 5, 2004 12:06 AM ET, http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=0NRZQXQGEOWQMCRBAEOCFEY?type=businessNews&storyID=6411568
2 - Double détermination du GN clinical evidence, en premier par un adjectif en -ing, en second par un segment en -ing déterminant : increasing clinical evidence linking cannabis use to mental illness.
2 - Increasing numbers of people are becoming dependent on cannabis, The Observer has learnt. Department of Health figures show that drug centres are reporting growing numbers coming to them with problems related to the drug. Nine per cent of all those attending clinics cited cannabis as the main reason they were attending, rather than any of the other drugs they were using, twice as many as a decade ago. With a separate study by the World Health Organisation showing that one in five 15-year-olds in Britain smokes cannabis - more than twice the world average - there is concern that many are becoming addicted to the drug earlier in life.Although government experts insist cannabis is non-addictive, there is growing evidence suggesting that regular users of high-strength varieties may develop a chronic dependence. There is also increasing clinical evidence linking cannabis use to mental illness, particularly schizophrenia, psychosis, anxiety and depression. US research shows that 80 per cent of new cases of psychosis in some hospitals have been triggered by cannabis use. Someone who starts using cannabis aged 15 is at more than four times the risk of developing schizophrenia over the next 11 years than someone starting smoking the drug at 18. And 18-year-olds who have used cannabis at least 50 times have a seven-fold increased risk of developing psychosis in the next 15 years. Last month The Priory, one of Britain's leading addiction treatment centres, responded to an increase in inquiries about cannabis dependency by publishing a new leaflet for users and their relatives. The group's medical director, Michael Rowlands, said: 'There is no doubt that cannabis is addictive and that we are seeing an increase in dependence, especially among the young and those smoking the stronger varieties of cannabis. Alarm at rising cannabis 'addiction', O, sub and first §§, 13.6.2004, http://society.guardian.co.uk/drugsandalcohol/story/0,8150,1237739,00.html
The Guardian p. 3 22.10.2004
Falluja fighting continues US marines were today battling insurgents attempting to return to the southern Iraqi city of Falluja , killing three militants as violence continued to flare across the Sunni-dominated heartland. Headline and §1, G, 17.11.2004, http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,1353310,00.html
Disenchanted Britons head for the exit Increasing [ adjectif ] numbers seeking new life abroad [ segment déterminant ] At teatime today, as they do most weekdays, a fair share of those with leisure on their hands will be flopping down with a cup of tea and a biscuit and tuning into A Place in the Sun. Not, for those out of the
loop, the classic weepie starring Montgomery
Clift and Elizabeth Taylor, but Channel 4's hugely successful series
which finds homes in exotic locations - Marrakesh is the destination today - for
Brits who fancy a change of scene. Headline, sub and first §§, G, 5.11.2004, http://travel.guardian.co.uk/news/story/0,7445,1344279,00.html
The chief constable of Humberside police who is refusing to resign in the face of stinging criticism over his force's handling of Ian Huntley received the backing of his boss today. The chairman of the Humberside police authority, Colin Inglis, said that chief constable David Westwood was being made a scapegoat for police failings that were identified in the Bichard inquiry. The inquiry yesterday highlighted the "deeply shocking" blunders made by both Humberside and Cambridgeshire police forces in their investigations of allegations of sexual offences committed by Huntley in Grimsby before he was appointed caretaker of Soham Village College. Chairman backs beleaguered police chief, G, 23.6.2004, http://society.guardian.co.uk/children/story/0,1074,1245532,00.html
Washington was reported today to be considering offering North Korea a limited set of incentives to dismantle its nuclear weapons, as the two nations headed into six-way talks aimed at averting a crisis over the arms programme. 'New offer' in Korean nuclear talks, G, 23.6.2004, http://www.guardian.co.uk/korea/article/0,2763,1245546,00.html
Paying the price for instant loans Business is booming for credit firms charging desperate customers up to 400% interest Headline and sub, G, 18.6.2004, http://money.guardian.co.uk/news_/story/0,1456,1241719,00.html
He's been given a kicking at the local elections and was last night facing a bloody nose at the European polls. So it's just the kind of cheerful news Tony Blair needs now: that the cinematic equivalent of a rottweiler, Michael Moore, is contemplating making the prime minister his next victim. Fresh from savaging President George Bush in the critically acclaimed Fahrenheit 9/11, the filmmaker is now thinking about making a movie about Mr Blair and Britain's role in the war on Iraq. "I personally hold Blair more responsible for this war than I do George Bush. The reason is, Blair knows better," Moore said in an interview with the Reuters news agency. "Blair is not an idiot. What is he doing hanging around this guy?" America has been bracing itself for the release of Fahrenheit 9/11, which won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes film festival. There has even been speculation that the film could help to tip the November US presidential election in favour of Mr Bush's rival, John Kerry. Movie rottweiler turns on Blair, G, 14.6.2004, http://film.guardian.co.uk/news/story/0,12589,1238174,00.html
The Guardian p. 2 22.10.2004
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. stocks closed higher on Thursday, notching gains in a shortened week, as investors set aside worries about budding inflation and a looming interest-rate hike while they looked forward to a strong second-quarter earnings season. Stocks Rise; End Quiet Week Higher, R, 10.6.2004, http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=FT350U3LWQ0SICRBAEOCFFA?type=businessNews&storyID=5396560
Khalid Ali sat quietly looking towards the sun-baked golden dome rising from the shrine of the Imam Ali, almost refusing to notice the crowd of chanting gunmen who danced through the street before him. Gunmen rule in a city gripped with fright, GI, p.1, 16.4.2004, http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,1193136,00.html
TERROR group al-Qaeda yesterday issued a chilling warning to Western airlines.
OSAMA: WE'LL STRIKE PLANES, DMi, 8.6.2004,
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/allnews/tm_objectid=14312686%26method=f
The Guardian 20.5.2004
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