Example sentences of "[noun] [verb] it [prep] the [num ord] " in BNC.
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1 | By the late 1980s the CPSU itself accepted , as Gorbachev put it to the 27th Party Congress , that no single party could have a ‘ monopoly of truth ’ and that the movement as a whole would not normally be unanimous on all the issues it confronted . |
2 | ‘ The commission took into consideration their record over the past five years , ’ said Graham Kelly , the FA 's chief executive , ‘ but they also noted that they had taken steps to improve it over the last 18 months . ’ |
3 | Their work was still circulating in the 1940s when Simone de Beauvoir criticised it in The Second Sex ( 1949 ) . |
4 | Having always been aware of the Cathedral I 've often wondered what impact it has on visitors seeing it for the first time . |
5 | The Formula One world champion test drives it for the first time in Phoenix on January 4 and will find his sleek , high-speed T93 series chassis also longer , bigger , heavier and cheaper than any previous IndyCar or championship-winning Canon Williams Renault FW14 . |
6 | If a child has it for the first ten years hardly anything else matters . |
7 | But remember it was your decision to buy it in the first place , nobody else 's , and if it 's you that 's wrong , or you that does n't suit the item , then you probably do n't have any entitlement to an exchange or a refund . |
8 | As Thomas Becon put it in the sixteenth century , it was a ‘ duty of children ’ whose parents were ‘ aged and fallen into poverty , so that they are not able to live of themselves , or to get their living by their own industry and labour ’ , to work and care for them and ‘ provide necessaries for them , ‘ just as in their own childhoods ‘ their parents cared and provided for them . ’ |
9 | In a nasty , but highly entertaining tirade , one of the more perceptive remarks was that if it was n't for The Wedding Present , Ukrainian music would be confined solely to Blue Peter specials ; surely one of the main reasons the band did it in the first place . |
10 | In fact , a musical dedicated to Elvis is on tour , giving two fans the chance to see it for the FORTIETH time . |
11 | If the success of Drury 's frame-up was breathtaking in its audacity , the failure of the Appeal Court to expose it during the next ten years was no less so in its crassness . |
12 | Booth did it in the last minute , slipping the ball home after Lee Richardson , an outstanding performer in the Aberdeen midfield , had struck the post with a clever shot made possible when Rhodes miskicked . |
13 | So obviously you just write down that Rita did it on the 10th . |
14 | The distance estimate is important because astronomers use it as the first rung in the distance ladder they extend across the Universe . |
15 | As David Lodge put it in the first issue of The Birmingham Magazine : |
16 | Young couples took their children to it as soon as their legs were long enough ; old people accepted it as the first of their last climbs and many beery pledges were made to the mountain in the Deeside pubs . |
17 | A thing of great beauty , it was not unusual to hear sharp intakes of breath as people beheld it for the first time . |
18 | Defoe and Richardson enjoyed it in the eighteenth century , Dickens in the next . |
19 | However , it was not sent out for review until mid-September , Jones receiving it on the 20th . |
20 | Evidencve of the original hospital is fading as new building and departments take it into the next century . |
21 | Oxford left it until the second half for their equaliser . |
22 | I will call it the principle of comprehensive ( political ) neutrality to distinguish it from the second principle which will be called the principle of narrow ( political ) neutrality . |
23 | Of the leading English contenders , Peter Marshall , Chris Walker and Del Harris made it to the last 16 . |
24 | The movie version blows it in the first couple of minutes . |
25 | This band of gold probably originates from Egypt , where lovers wore it on the fourth finger of the right hand or ring finger . |
26 | As Palmerston put it in the mid-19th century , ministers , especially the Prime Minister , must be able to defend themselves in Parliament daily , ‘ and in order to do this they must be minutely acquainted with all the details of the business of their offices , and the only way of being constantly armed with such information is to conduct and direct those details themselves ’ . |
27 | Fortunately , the result of this test proved to be negative but , given the temperance of her lifestyle , her decision to take it in the first place would , at the very least , seem as bizarre as Mr Oliver Reed , the thirst , embarking upon an assertiveness training course . |
28 | ‘ There 's no doubt I had chances to nail it in the last set , but you 've got to hand it to Dennis . |
29 | Hundreds of soldiers doing it after the last war — and airmen . |
30 | Two factors affect it in the first four years . |