Example sentences of "[prep] [pers pn] [prep] the [num ord] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Fortunately I do n't have to do the really dangerous stuff , buteven backstage in the wings I did have a few things falling about me on the last day in Manchester .
2 Then he took the wallet of photographs from his pocket and leafed through them to the ninth picture in Heather 's collection .
3 It was close in the end but it might have been even tighter if Colbert had n't made way for them on the last stage .
4 ‘ The money we lifted was hardly intended for them in the first place , was it ? ’
5 Presumably such militias date back to the last years of the Roman period , although there is no evidence for them in the fifth century .
6 I 've done lots of work for them in the last couple
7 England 's first choice spinners , Emburey and Tufnell , did not take a wicket between them until the third day of the third Test .
8 Particular highlights for me over the last year have included :
9 As well as coaching many of Britain 's leading international crews , Spracklen is a key member of the Oxford University team , and he will be returning from Canada in March to look after them for the last fortnight before the Boat Race .
10 A Range Rover pulling a horsebox sped towards them round the next bend , straddling the middle of the lane and causing Mossop to swerve through a muddy ditch at the roadside .
11 ‘ Dustin was so far ahead of me through the first half of the picture , it was n't even funny , ’ Peckinpah confessed .
12 ‘ I felt I might have passed the pair in front of me on the last lap but what was the point , I had no chance of winning and this is a tough circuit . ’
13 I did the business with my camera , now there was plenty of light with the barn doors open , and was in the process of replacing the tarpaulin when the alarm bells went off and scared the hell out of me for the second time in five minutes .
14 As the white cliffs of Dover receded and the coast of France drew near , the inimitable excitement of ‘ abroad ’ took hold of me for the first time — the only really positive emotion I had felt for twenty-six months .
15 They secured eight but also lost three wickets including two run outs , one of them off the last ball .
16 They did not all give up there and then , but presumably went on to take the test again and eventually to pass — many of them at the second attempt .
17 Even more interestingly , I understand that even some of Mrs Thatcher 's friends share this opinion and are proposing — some of them for the first time in their lives — not to vote for the Tories .
18 Seventy boys and girls from U6 to U14 played rugby — most of them for the first time ever .
19 According to forecasts no less than 2 million people will visit Seville in the six months of Expo , many of them for the first time .
20 Any major phases or colonisation are as likely to have taken place in the seventh , eighth or ninth centuries , as Peter Sawyer has suggested , and therefore to be undocumented , as they are to have happened in the thirteenth century , when we hear of them for the first time from surviving records .
21 ‘ Millions of people travel to the region every year many of them for the first time and we want to make sure that the lasting impression they take with them is a good one . ’
22 ‘ Millions of people travel to the region every year , many of them for the first time , and we want to make sure the lasting impression they take with them is a good one . ’
23 We have studied the sediment from the bottom of Loch Ness and Loch Morar to discover whether the sea entered either of them after the last ice age .
24 It was proposed that the trainee nurses would be accommodated in the main building of the institution and the committee recommended a scheme for ten probationers , five of them in the first year .
25 The sheer volume of the many assessments externally required by the Act and now under design by SEAC runs the danger of forcing the less confident teachers — indeed all of them in the first instance , as they ascend the steep learning curve — into ‘ rote teaching ’ , a much more dangerous activity than rote learning because it tends to shut down that sense of intellectual curiosity without which children are not really being taught .
26 There were three of them in the first team at Peterborough last Saturday , and on Tuesday night young Adam Reed was in the squad .
27 Faced , however , with the catastrophic increase in unemployment and the need to occupy large numbers of workless people without directly employing them ( which would have run counter to the economic doctrine which had led to the redundancy of many of them in the first place ) , the Government poured money into any ‘ voluntary ’ agency willing to put in a bid for government-funded cheap labour .
28 that wh who in the government would he dispose of and he sat and smiled gently and said well he would n't have appointed any of them in the first place .
29 J.D. had told her on her last visit , when she had handed in the column she had just read , that there had been a large number of letters about Vesta 's contribution and he would be publishing some of them in the next issue .
30 ‘ He 's intending to drop in and have a social drink with a few of them in the next day or so , have lunch or dinner , participate in old boys ’ chat , that sort of thing . ’
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