Example sentences of "a few days of [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | When Miss Louisa had a second more severe stroke at the end of August , and Miss Ellen another heart attack , both old ladies died within a few days of each other . |
2 | Unfortunately old Mr and Mrs Linton caught the fever too , and died within a few days of each other . |
3 | Observations were taken over three weekdays within a few days of each other to cover the period between 8.00 a.m. and 7.00 p.m. , so that at each datapoint there were 1980 ( 11 hours x 60 minutes x 3 ) observations of activity for each individual . |
4 | Father and son had died within a few days of each other … |
5 | ‘ The deaths of father and son within a few days of each other raise questions to which I have to find satisfactory answers . |
6 | I believe it to be one of two aircraft , both Dornier Do 17Zs which were both shot down in the same area within a few days of each other . |
7 | Indeed , if anything , modern societies seem bent on compounding the problem by considerably lengthening and complicating adolescence — a period of life which , as we have seen , barely exists in totemic societies where individuals go from childhood to adulthood via a few days of traumatic initiation . |
8 | A gigantic undertaking like the invasion of Europe needed at least a few days of good weather to give it a chance , and we appeared to be settled into a period of wind , rain and low cloud . |
9 | He was offering her a few days of physical pleasure which would only leave her thirsty for more . |
10 | After a few days of this treatment , Moz began to feel less threatened by his owner , and began to greet her at the gate . |
11 | But after a few days of insipid campaigning there was grumbling back at base about the way the campaign was going . |
12 | They grew with his reading of Frazer who described the ‘ Burnt Land of Lydia ’ contrasting with the surrounding verdure and marvelled ( in the conclusion of The Dying God ) at ‘ what may be called the Australian spring ’ where ‘ the sandy and stony wilderness , over which the silence and desolation of death appear to brood , is suddenly , after a few days of torrential rain , transformed into a landscape smiling with verdure ’ . |