Example sentences of "the [noun sg] [prep] [art] [noun sg] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Secondly we have not heard of anything that has changed in this county since nineteen eighty sufficient to warrant or justify in this alteration the addition of a policy the effect of which , one one with a similar effect having been thrown out at that time .
2 For the majority of the public the health service is only accessible for the purpose of treatment .
3 During the remainder of the century no improvement was was registered .
4 At the same meeting at which the Vial memorandum was read , on 6 September 1791 , a letter to the secretary from Messrs Kirkman and Hendy ( who were present ) was produced : ‘ Sir , In consequence of your Advertisement we beg leave to inform you , that we have contracted with Lord Camden for about 100 acres of building land , near [ Old ] St Pancras Church , abutting on the Turnpike Road leading to Kentish Town , which is intended to be called Camden Town conceiving the situation eligible for your truly valuable Institution we request you will lay this our proposal before the Society — We hold this Land under his Lordship for 99 years from Michaelmas last , the three first subject to no Ground Rent , our proposal is , that Lord Camden does and he will under our direction grant the Society a lease for 99 years from that time , the three first subject to no rent but for the remainder of the term an Annual Rent of thirty pounds per acre , should this proposal meet with approbation , the Society have only to direct their Surveyor to make out any quantity of land and in what position they conceive will best answer their purpose ’ .
5 In the remainder of the book the focus is on activities , feelings , and relationships in the present .
6 From the Peer to the peasant the whole country seem boiling with indignation ’ recorded the Edinburgh Quaker , Henry Wigham .
7 This conditional landholding — the pomestie — created the nucleus of a new service stratum dependent on the Prince in a way the boyars had never been .
8 Thoughtfully he thrust it into the base of a bush a few feet from the path and covered it with dried leaves .
9 From the base of the flake a long stride left gains a foot ledge .
10 From the base of the leaf a spike appears , bearing two lots of bobbles containing thousands of fern spores .
11 For this reason , the FRED proposes that on the expiry of a warrant the amount previously recognised in shareholders ' funds be recognised in the statement of total recognised gains and losses .
12 But at the expiry of the term the tenant has the right to remove those fixtures which are tenant 's fixtures .
13 Prior to the change in the law the relevant income tax provisions only referred to " income " ( ie there was only effectively the first limb ) and the House of Lords in Perry v Astor held that " income " following Colquhoun v Brooks [ 1889 ] 14 AC 493 , ( 1889 ) 2 TC 490 meant " any income chargeable to a tax under the British Finance Act of the year " .
14 Without the support of the peasantry the liberal-radical movements were insignificant in agrarian countries , or at least manageable .
15 At the trial of the appellant the Crown intended to lead evidence from the official shorthand writer at the Romford County Court , producing a transcript of the appellant 's public examination , and from an officer of the court , the appellant 's bankruptcy file .
16 At the trial of the action the plaintiff conceded that the defendants could not have foreseen the precise chain of events which led to the explosion .
17 Thus , though it demonstrates the existence from the outset a common source of inspiration in Owenism for both trade unionism and co-operation , it demonstrates also that trade unionism saw Producer Co-operation not as an alternative and preferable way of organising manufacture and hence one to be adopted generally , not in short as a prime purpose , but as an occasional weapon .
18 We 've got to spend the award of the contract the day before because I put the leader of the council on the spot .
19 By sailing the board at an angle the leeward rail digs in providing more sideways resistance .
20 One hostile dark eyebrow lifted briefly and a pair of diamond-hard eyes swept quickly over her , seeming to assess in the flicker of an eyelid the stylish dark red outfit she was wearing .
21 In the flicker of an eyelid the hostility had vanished and he had become a model of charm and smiling good humour , as he politely asked her all about herself and answered her questions in return .
22 You each had a Black Baby and the donation of a penny a week out of your pocket money meant that the Sister could move your small paper cut-out one step higher to God .
23 But outside the heart of the wood the Green Men brought berries and fertility in the form of birds to the villages and farms of the people .
24 This fiddling can go straight to the heart of the way a woman feels about herself .
25 At the heart of the development a new glazed roof stands over the two-level shopping area .
26 Reshuffling its North America operations is , ZDS officials say , ‘ part of an effort to make the firm more responsive to the personal computer Unix-based market worldwide … the company had to start at the heart of the problem the bureaucracy in the company . ’
27 I say real progress has been made but today I am asking you to think about the next step a step that I am sure we all feel is at the heart of the matter a transforming step perhaps the critical step that will guarantee ultimate success in fulfilling god 's loving will for his church .
28 Try to identify the heart of the matter the question is getting at .
29 Down in the heart of the coke the limited supply of air is reacting with the carbon to form carbon monoxide .
30 We mourn those bereaved , and in their memory we welcomed the reopening of the line a year later .
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