Example sentences of "[adj] [subord] a [noun sg] [prep] [num] " in BNC.

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1 So a thirty year old service might be entirely different than a person with ten years service deferring his pension .
2 Estimates ranged as high as a couple of hundred units having been sold in Japan .
3 The boy was so small ; more like a child of eight than a boy of fifteen .
4 Her papoose — not much bigger than a child of ten or twelve , so insubstantial had Sycorax become — was slid into the shaft feet first , so that Sycorax 's head was nearest to the surface of the ground , slightly tilted so that she would face upwards in death , her mouth near the earth and the living who walked on it .
5 The average rating is thus 100 because a child of ten years old with a mental age of ten will score 100 : —
6 This barrier becomes intensely noticeable when a member of one species needs urgently to communicate a matter of life or death to a member of another .
7 Fewer than a quarter of 500 men questioned in the survey knew how to do up a bow tie and under half knew the name of the knot in their tie on the day they were interviewed .
8 I remember being present when a team of 100 was commissioned at the Anaheim Vineyard in California to plant a new church in the Los Angeles area .
9 The very science that he is , presumably , engaged in can itself be recognized as existing as a practice within three of the ISAs he refers to ; the educational , the political and the communicative ISAs .
10 For more than a century after 1850 the movement of coal was the life-blood of British railways .
11 Even if the committee agree to a grant , it ca n't be more than a couple of thousand — not enough to keep you going for a few months .
12 Ten of their 13 opponents in the Rio de Janeiro championship are minor teams , which means a series of games in tiny stadiums on bumpy , pot-holed pitches and rarely more than a couple of thousand fans .
13 The poor old PCW could n't hold more than a couple of thousand .
14 I had thought I might stroll out towards the famous Liseberg Gardens , but I got no more than a couple of hundred yards before I was turned back by the pitiless downpour .
15 These do n't usually rise more than a couple of hundred metres before falling back along parabolic paths .
16 They are rarely more than a couple of hundred metres high , and they are usually symmetrical , although they may be ‘ breached ’ on one side , where a lava flow has emerged .
17 Moreover , statistics collected by the Countryside Commission suggest that the overwhelming majority of visitors to the countryside venture no more than a couple of hundred yards from their car .
18 He liked to boast that , in central London , he was never more than a couple of hundred yards from some club , institution or association of which he was a member and which could provide , at the very least , a roof in a rainstorm .
19 It will not say how many subscribers it has — only that it expects to sign up no more than a couple of dozen by the autumn .
20 The new companies , many of them under a year old and employing no more than a couple of dozen people , base their computers on processor chips imported from the US .
21 Cabezon was certainly in England with his master , Philip of Spain , for more than a year during 1554–5 when it is improbable that he was not known to Blitheman who was in the service of Mary I. Perhaps also a copy of his belatedly published Obras de musica ( 1578 ) found its way to England , offering models of song variation .
22 Three people have been charged with handling stolen goods after police seized more than a quarter of million pounds worth of luxury cars hidden in farm buildings .
23 He 's perfectly competent , well supplied with money always , and it 's no more than a quarter past nine .
24 After a boom period in the 1950s and 1960s , when real wages grew by more than a quarter between 1950 and 1965 , and when earnings rose by more than 40 per cent , the later 1960s ushered in years of intermittent depression .
25 It 's much too late to make a pitch on consistency no one person knows or understands more than a fraction of one discipline among many anymore .
26 If life is nothing more than a moving from one activity to the next it is not surprising if we become restless , cluttered and superficial .
27 In this way the choice between a particular and a universal interpretation of the concept of social representation can involve more than a preference for one son of definition over another .
28 The results for those universities producing more than a total of 10 theses on Scottish geology between 1960 and 1983 are shown ranked as Table 5 — Changes in proportion of Scottish geology theses with time .
29 Providing that the catfish is avoided , and no more than a total of 15 cm ( 6 in ) length fish is introduced for every 0.09 square metre ( square foot ) of the surface area of the water , excluding the marginal areas , then few problems should be encountered .
30 Mr Barnes said that trading was ‘ holding up well ’ in Britain , particularly at the company 's new restaurants , but that the whole country would not be able to accommodate more than a total of 12 restaurants .
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