Example sentences of "[num] [adv] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | So , the star compiles and writes the evening , and calls in a fellow thesp to direct : Petherbridge 's The Eight O'Clock Muse is staged by Peter Barkworth , John Sessions 's Napoleon — The American Story by Kenneth Branagh ( a promising young actor , in case you had n't heard ) . |
2 | But they got the bit about the eight o'clock milk ? ’ |
3 | white as the eight o'clock pill . |
4 | She had fingered the lamp and slid back an edge of the curtain on to a sun-flecked , eight o'clock day , searching for a clue . |
5 | And it was one of those such nights that at half past seven I 'd just got most of the fires set and ready to er er just on and going and I 'd half an hour to get everything straightened and ready for eight o'clock opening , and the door at the back went , which was where the office used to be . |
6 | To the rector 's unfeigned delight , the newcomer was among the very few communicants at the altar rail at the eight o'clock service on the following Sunday . |
7 | Yeah the eight thirty , the eight o'clock service is a lot more seems a lot more compact , I know you have n't got the hymns , but it seems to erm start , go on and finish , you know it |
8 | So he said Well we start at mm half past eight eight o'clock time usually . |
9 | THEATRE / The Eight O'Clock News — Riverside , W6 . |
10 | Like a best-man 's speech , Edward Petherbridge 's The Eight O'Clock News is an anecdotal monologue , often rambling , occasionally funny and inevitably far too long . |
11 | Er , if you want to er , develop that part of the argument , then by all means , let's do so , after the eight o'clock news . |
12 | Right , exactly sixty seconds to go , then I 'll bring you the eight o'clock news , then after that , we 'll continue our conversation on the main topics of the morning , according to you . |
13 | Right the eight o'clock news coming up , on this radio station . |
14 | If you 've just joined us for the eight o'clock news , as many people do , welcome . |
15 | did you get the eight o'clock news ? |
16 | ‘ Look , I 'm leaving at teatime — catching the eight o'clock flight . ’ |
17 | ON the eight o'clock radio news that Monday morning there was a substantial piece about an exciting police chase in Essex — understandably , on a rather lonely road . |
18 | His reflection was fed by information from a wide variety of sources — from the presidential staff at the Elysée , from his ministers , from officials and experts , from the abundant official documentation that passed across his desk , and from the media ( he read all the major French newspapers as well as the Daily Telegraph , the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung , and the New York Herald Tribune , and his normal weekday routine always ended in time for the eight o'clock television news ) . |
19 | the eleven o'clock bus . |
20 | The majority of the cargo was sold off — forty only sailing on to Spanish Town to make a token showing for the records . |
21 | I was champing at the bit to investigate Stanford shopping precinct before my 2 p.m. hospital appointment with Dr Levy and his team , so Kenneth hastily finished his third helping and we walked the short distance to the precinct . |
22 | The drama occurred at 6.53 yesterday morning . |
23 | But captain Graham Gooch waited almost 60 hours before phoning with the bad news at 9.30 yesterday morning . |
24 | 2 Also homework . |
25 | The features of ineffective groups are closer to Tuckman 's Stage 2 ie Storming . |
26 | the mental processes involved in object recognition ; 2 how object recognition and naming develops in children ; and 3. how it can break down in certain cases of brain damage . |
27 | When we left at 11.20 am the forecourt would be crowded with another congregation waiting to enter for the 11.30 am Celebration of the Sung Eucharist . |
28 | Thus there has been some significant organizational development in the industry even since 1985 when Table 11.1 was drawn up . |
29 | Despite this somewhat unstable basis the Company did quite well until 1630 when trade was dislocated by a famine in Gujerat , and in the next few years its legal position was undermined because Charles I allowed the Courteen family — whose interests in the West Indies had suffered because he had given away their rights in certain islands inadvertently — to trade with India without any regard for the Company 's charter . |
30 | 2 Where path rejoins road , turn right on path , immediately leaving road and passing through gate on right side of cottage . |