Example sentences of "[adv] one to " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 MINING experts appointed by the Government to review the prospects for the ten most threatened pits on British Coal 's original closure list have reported only one to be economically viable .
2 It originates from considering , for example , the situation where an older and a younger person would benefit equally from treatment but resources allow only one to be treated .
3 If you sold just one to eight on a flap that would be a tar er that would be a total revenue of six thousand pound .
4 There 's always one to be heard somewhere during the summer — in the piazza in front of the art gallery and Town Hall or in a park .
5 The whole operation was for Reagan 's sake , as well as the hostages ' ; it was a present for him , preferably one to be delivered by Christmas , or by the State of the Union address in January , or by the elections in November .
6 Chair , where , where erm , agreements er , leave things open wherever possible , the courts will interpret them as the parties intended to act reasonably one to the other , and er , if there were a formal agreement and that was then tested it would be a matter for the courts to decide what was reasonable , obviously asking for , what was it you 're suggesting , ten million ?
7 Thus , though it demonstrates the existence from the outset a common source of inspiration in Owenism for both trade unionism and co-operation , it demonstrates also that trade unionism saw Producer Co-operation not as an alternative and preferable way of organising manufacture and hence one to be adopted generally , not in short as a prime purpose , but as an occasional weapon .
8 He was in France again in the spring of 1952 , and this was followed by a trip to the United States and then one to Scotland .
9 At the end of those ten minutes , though , they had taken a turn to the right , then one to the left , and it was apparent that Naylor knew his way around the area .
10 ‘ It 's as true as I 'm sitting here telling you , ’ insisted Dodger Gillespie , never one to be subject to fancies or unsought hallucinations .
11 The rain , however , failed to silence the pen of Parsons ( never one to be at a loss for a line or two of copy ! ) .
12 A correspondent of The Times thought it was ‘ like the first hearing of a great symphony ’ , and Harold Laski , never one to be outdone in either flattery or hyperbole , wrote to Baldwin that it was ‘ the greatest speech a Prime Minister has ever made ’ .
13 Bicker was never one to be tied down with intrigue and politics . ’
  Next page