Example sentences of "to [pron] [noun sg] [prep] [art] [num ord] " in BNC.
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1 | Returning to my seat after the second interval , I had decided that this was a first night which had somehow not ‘ taken off ’ and that all kinds of good intentions had somehow failed to coalesce , though they probably would later in the run . |
2 | It should be Christians , and not only Marxists , who assert that capitalism too easily turns a blind eye to its exploitation of the Third World . |
3 | Out of the contemporary turmoil of Hindu tradition Rabindranath Tagore wrote of the same mysterious sources of renewal : I thought that my voyage had come to its end at the last limit of my power — that the path before me was closed , that provisions were exhausted and the time come to take shelter in a silent obscurity . |
4 | The glissando begins on the second beat , reaches its upward limit on the third , returns to its starting-point on the fourth , and ends on the first beat of the next bar . |
5 | He believed that the human capacity for moral , social , and political adaptation had been stretched to its limit in the first century of the Industrial Revolution and fatally outstripped since . |
6 | And she wondered , as she headed for the hallway and the staircase that led up to her bedroom on the first floor , why the fact that that had not happened troubled her so . |
7 | Will he join me in expressing our deep respect , our loyal affection and our good wishes to Her Majesty on the 40th anniversary of her accession ? |
8 | Catherine behaved so sweetly to her husband in the next few days that Thrushcross Grange seemed full of sunshine , and in spite of his doubts , Mr Edgar allowed Heathcliff to visit her regularly . |
9 | Desperation to escape also helped her to find her way through the labyrinth of passageways , up to her room on the second floor . |
10 | takes you up to her flat on the eighth floor . |
11 | Their enthusiastic welcome brought a smile to her face for the first time that morning . |
12 | National insurance contributions rise to their peak with the third and fourth quintiles . |
13 | In fact , there is no further mention of the chapel in the Minute Books of their Meetings for nearly three centuries , and much later they were to claim that they did not know about it until it was brought to their attention for the first time in 1846 . |
14 | If we are looking for advice on a particular situation which affects us then impartiality of the second type is particularly important ; for instance , the judge who assesses the relevant facts and selects the relevant moral or legal rules must not be someone who has something to gain or lose by the outcome , although this presupposes the correctness of the rules to be applied and so takes us back to the impartiality normally associated with legislators , which is a matter of their involvement in determining rules which are not only universalisable but are actually to be universalised , at least within a given community , and to their impartiality in the third sense namely the adequacy of the consideration given to the various relevant considerations . |
15 | I boarded an elevator and shot up alone to their office on the 32nd floor . |
16 | But he did n't like to go against his grandmother who , in her grim fashion , had been kind to his dad at the last . |
17 | He would doubtless suffer this blow to his esteem in a First Folio or a 1532 Chaucer , given half a chance , but in lesser books the wound is too serious . |
18 | Karl Gesner has had to swallow quite a few blows to his ego over the last few days . |
19 | He had curled up on to his bed at the first opportunity and fallen fast asleep . |
20 | Last year she had come to his school for the first time , and every eye had turned to gape at her long red hair and golden earrings as she swept into the assembly-hall wearing one of her special dresses . |
21 | As Owen had not appointed Yussuf to his service in the first place but Yussuf had appointed himself , this seemed beside the point . |
22 | When my hon. Friend returns to his desk after the next election has been won by the Conservatives , will he bear it in mind that in the past 10 years west Lancashire has benefited greatly from being a development area ? |
23 | He also called on President René to demonstrate his commitment to reform by appointing three opposition members to his Cabinet within the next two months . |
24 | Some of those who believed that his first bankruptcy had been engineered by the Shipping Federation had come to his rescue at the eleventh hour . |
25 | Changes of climate have also been investigated during the historic time scale when a range of historical techniques have been utilized , including diaries and records together with sedimentary evidence , and information from faunal remains , archaeology , tree rings and ocean deposits , and G. Manley , a geographer at London University prior to his appointment as the first Professor of Environmental Sciences at Lancaster University , was one who researched many of the obscure details of climatic fluctuations in Western Europe ( e.g. Manley , 1952 ) . |
26 | He often raises that subject , and we understand his desperation about what will happen to his seat at the next election . |
27 | These doubts about his work were directly related to his predicament in the last months of 1939 . |
28 | A FAMILY holiday turned to tragedy when a four-year-old boy plunged to his death from a fifth floor balcony , an inquest heard . |
29 | And a family of nephews — ’ another hesitation — ‘ and a niece — ’ Noreen looked up at this , and almost defied the Bishop with her stare , ‘ — that do him much credit in this world and I trust will be of some satisfaction to his account in the next . |
30 | 69.315 ) and consequently to his source in the first century B.C. : its content agrees with an opinion which the source of Appian . |