Example sentences of "of [noun] [verb] [pron] [prep] the " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | This uncertainty might , on the one hand , encourage social commentators in the attitude expressed by a writer in The Economist in 1848 : ‘ In our condition suffering and evil are nature 's admonitions ; they can not be got rid of ; and the impatient attempts of benevolence to banish them from the world by legislation , before benevolence has learnt their object and their end , have always been productive of more evil than good . ’ |
2 | ‘ Easy — a stroke of genius hit me at the height of the bombing , General . |
3 | The lack of coins deprives us of the evidence to form any assessment of their dynastic histories or tribal boundaries . |
4 | But it is still too early to be certain , and the jury must remain out until there is sufficient evidence of a true change of heart to distinguish it from the earnest gestures of political expediency . |
5 | Would he also look to a change of driver to help him with the draw he will want at Augusta ? |
6 | His son , a bachelor of twenty-five , became King Henry V , and he experienced a couple of attempts to usurp him during the first year , but by August 1415 he was able to sail with an invasion fleet of 1500 vessels to France , where he withstood an attack launched on 25th . |
7 | The Minotaur was finally slain by Theseus , who found his way out of the labyrinth by trailing a skein of thread given him by the king 's daughter , ARIADNE . |
8 | A final change of level takes us under the archway into the next small grassed and planted area , an altogether quieter space . |
9 | And it could take more than a change of luck to lift them off the bottom of the table . |
10 | There were signs , especially in 1988 , that the players appeared to be trying harder in the one-day internationals than in the Tests , and the traditionalists — who of course regard themselves as the real cricket lovers — feared for the future . |
11 | I take his point about maintenance and I shall of course draw it to the Housing Executive 's attention . |
12 | This of course takes us into the domain of attitudes and feelings of the learners , and is an area more influenced by emotion . |
13 | This of course put me in the wrong . |
14 | Such an astigmatic view of course excludes them from the main focus of research . |
15 | I endeavoured to paint a picture of this scene , but again and again legions of midges drove me from the spot : I got a phial of essence supposed to keep them away , but alas ! in vain . |
16 | I loved it when a whole pile of notes met me in the morning and I did not surface till lunchtime . |
17 | of times kissed her on the arse |
18 | A letter was sent to the parish officers of Kempston informing them of the gross impropriety of their conduct respecting the patient and the institution . |
19 | However , the Council of Guardians re-submitted it to the Majlis on Jan. 24 , calling for revisions to be made to it . |
20 | A decision was taken in principle to require agencies with independent sources of income to transfer them to the central treasury . |
21 | The coronet is shown in loving detail as it embodies the moment when this family of merchants made it to the princely ranks . |
22 | For Foucault , the tendency of theories of ideology to entrammel themselves in the categories of psychoanalysis , even with the eternal in Althusser 's case , means that they themselves begin to utilize the very procedures of individuation that they ought to have been analysing . |
23 | He urged people not to let the short-term problems of recession blind them to the long-term truth . |
24 | As Maitland , who was a contemporary of Dicey , recognized , one repercussion of the consequent growth in the quantity and complexity of government business was that there was ‘ a tendency … on the part of parliament to confine itself to the work of legislation , of framing general rules of law , and of entrusting the power of dealing with particular cases to the king 's ministers , to boards of commissioners , to courts of law ’ . |
25 | Smith has been dismissed as ‘ presence of mind Smith ’ from his alleged remark on returning without his companion from a disastrous outing on the river : ‘ If I had not with great presence of mind hit him on the head with a boathook both would have been drowned , ’ but the story comes from Reminiscences of Oxford ( 1st edn. 1900 ) by William Tuckwell , who in his second edition ( 1907 ) consigned it to oblivion ; moreover , there was no charge of murder . |
26 | ( Paradoxically the release of tension enabled him in the next week to run up , turn out , patch together , a poetical melodrama about Cabestainh with which the house-guests had some civilised fun . ) |
27 | But I do not accept the submission of Mr. Everall ’ — who appeared for the father — ‘ that she should go so far as to establish that by their return they would be exposed to a grave risk of harm to bring them within the ambit of article 13 ( b ) . |
28 | At first glance the lumps of rock reveal nothing of the primitive technology which heralded the dawn of culture . |
29 | Even if a band that I liked did this , I 'm sure that it would not make me gay ( And even if the power of rock introduced you to the delights of homosexuality , who cares , eh ? |
30 | When the hamlets were first included in the development area for the new city of Milton keynes in the 1960s , people of Calverton fought it in the High Court and won . |