Example sentences of "[prep] another [unc] " in BNC.

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1 That is it for this week , so er hope you enjoyed it , join us next Friday for another er burning hot series of debates er another three ring circus , it 's called A Central Weekend .
2 Now , in addition to that , and I do n't know if this is the source of the confusion , we 've also made provision in the ninety four five budget for another er camera site operation , except that it 's a lower figure because that does n't actually include the camera because we made it clear that as a result of the decision last time here we did n't want to create a , a permanent precedent that this committee always picked up the bill for the camera .
3 What I 'd like to do now is reach for another er set of notes and er , talk about , change , change direction a bit and talk about checking erm short-term programmes .
4 When asked in 1890 if a country like Russia should not have an independent Ministry of Agriculture , Vyshnegradsky was responsible for another bon mot : ‘ But the Minister of Agriculture will not have anything to do . ’
5 So now I 'm look for another erm job you see .
6 Is respect for sexual choice any more important than respect for another 's property rights ?
7 ‘ Well , responsibility for another 's life has always terrified me , if that 's what you mean . ’
8 The doctrine of consideration provides that a promise will bind the promisor only if it is given as the price for another 's promise or as the price for an action which involves a detriment to the promisee .
9 The hours that followed were full of the lust of one woman for another 's body .
10 Then suddenly the words wove within me , transporting me through another 's imagination .
11 In other words we see the world through another 's eyes .
12 So about another er two two and a half weeks then , maybe a bit less .
13 As in fact I had a go at that I had a go at I had a go at them about another prod er another photograph .
14 Predictably , perhaps , I regard this argument not as a demonstration that the acquisition of new concepts is impossible , but as another reductio ad absurdum of the representational theory of the mind .
15 One man 's conflict may be water which flows unceremoniously off another 's back ; no sweat , no hassle .
16 You play at any time yo , during another pers , another player 's
17 I cos I ca n't picture another stone you know on any other roadsides and I 've been on plenty that and I travel and no and I can never know of another st stone that was put up to a tramp .
18 Not only in law , but in ordinary life , we look upon an act done by one man in pursuance of another 's orders as done by the person who gives the order .
19 And they kill from spite : they despise the colour of another 's skin and resent the way another worships God .
20 Squatting is nothing less than the seizure of another 's property without consent .
21 Our lives begin with the influence of another 's heart upon us .
22 Third , it must strike an appropriate balance between the interests of the various parties involved , without putting in jeopardy certain fundamental commitments , such as , for example , the protection of the individual and the absolute prohibition on the taking of another 's life .
23 A similar and perhaps better appreciated situation can happen in yacht racing where it is possible to ‘ take the wind ’ out of another 's sail .
24 The impossibility of becoming aware of another 's inwardness without a readiness to let myself feel as he does is plain when someone tries to communicate what is inside his head .
25 There is also a simple desire to enhance one 's own well-being by widening the contrast with another 's distress ; and this too attracts towards his viewpoint , since it is only in awareness from other personal or temporal viewpoints that one 's well-being is experienced as relative arousing envy of another 's happiness or nostalgia for one 's own in the past .
26 Whereas pity has to overcome a reluctance to be drawn into subjective awareness of another 's suffering , cruelty welcomes it .
27 ‘ We no longer ride in procession through the City — and of late , our servants , some of whom have served us since infancy , have all but one been replaced with surly rascals of another 's choosing . ’
28 Their importance will undoubtedly be misjudged however if we persist in the error of thinking that perceptual judgements , or those about consciousness , involve the replication of another 's inner experience , human or non-human .
29 Many were originally instinctive and , to that limited extent , occur naturally in animals : we normally make way for others in the street , keep promises or apologise , treat people politely and respect the sense of another 's property .
30 Thirdly , the criticism might be made that the distinction I earlier drew ( in the section on ‘ Autonomy ’ ) — between someone voluntarily being treated as a means to the satisfaction of another 's needs , and their being treated as a means to the satisfaction of another 's desires — is not adequate here .
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