Example sentences of "[verb] [pron] [verb] on the [num ord] " in BNC.
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1 | Do you want me to come on the nineteenth as well ? |
2 | It is providing an early dealing service to society members , allowing them to deal on the first day the shares are traded . |
3 | It is providing an early dealing service to society members , allowing them to deal on the first day the shares are traded on the stock market . |
4 | Moving the light round the half-circle , he let it rest on the third stone from the mouth of the chamber on the right hand side — the one which had been so prominent in his ‘ photograph ’ . |
5 | Standing up , he whirled the triple-pronged metal three times to gain momentum , then let it go on the third upswing . |
6 | I think , assume everything starts on the first beat of the bar as well . |
7 | Supporters of Mr Paul Davies , his chief opponent , believe he won on the second ballot . |
8 | The only thing that kept me going on the last lap of the journey was the rhythm of my steps . |
9 | I just thought it followed on the next page there |
10 | ‘ When we finally got there , tired and bedraggled , the custodian sent us packing on the next ferry because we did n't have the 2/6 entry fee ! ’ |
11 | What do you do on the seventh day ? |
12 | In what follows we focus on the last of these — the possibility that debt finance may shift the burden by passing on a reduced capital stock — but the reader may like to consider the other two aspects . |
13 | I think they start on the eighteenth |
14 | I think he starts on the tenth , I think he starts that that day . |
15 | Archbishop Egbert of Trier had himself represented on the first page of a book of liturgical gospel readings and in a psalter as if he were a Christ-like emperor seated in majesty . |
16 | The king had himself portrayed on the last coinage of his reign , issued c. 1485 , wearing the closed crown of the emperor , at much the same time as Henry VII introduced the style into England ; but James went one better by having himself shown in a realistic three-quarters face portrait , thereby producing what the numismatist Ian Stewart has described as ‘ probably the earliest Renaissance coin portrait outside Italy ’ . |