Example sentences of "[prep] one [noun sg] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 By then she had a terrible headache , but Hyper.0/6. one dose , relieved the headache instantly , the numbness was 50% improved after one minute and completely resolved after 30 minutes .
2 Yeah , you say it after one go and you go up to the next go do n't you ?
3 Mum , can I have i after one go and then you can go ?
4 Then one break in the seventh game of the final set enabled the world-ranked No 19 to scramble home after one hour and 51 minutes .
5 Their success rate is remarkable , not just in the number of people drug-free after one year but by the quality of their product .
6 Some learn after one telling and others take a hundred tellings .
7 In one patient symptoms became much less marked after one month but persisted to death at three months .
8 It was renewed after one month and was still in force when I left in December 1983 .
9 They start off after one smoke and when they 're half-way the smoke 's gone from there and is in another place .
10 He was drunk and as sure as hell only after one thing and you let yourself — ’
11 She was discharged after one week but four weeks later , she relapsed with symptoms of watery diarrhoea and fresh blood , abdominal pain , and a further weight loss of 6.3 kg .
12 And then after one page or half .
13 The Brecknell-Munro ‘ B/1 ’ trolley mast was slightly offset towards one side and one end , although identical in appearance to those on Corporation cars , these could only be turned to one side and small arrows had to be painted on the bulkheads ( later inside the headlamp . )
14 If you are below or above these measurements , your build tends towards one end or other of the average frame size .
15 The liberal 's contradictory impulses — to act with tolerance towards one group whilst simultaneously projecting racist sentiments on to another , despised group — manifest themselves in both Sapphire and Flame in the Street .
16 Kant tried to link the idea of numerically identical particulars with the idea of one space and one time , both conceived by him as the a priori forms of our intuition .
17 The ending of one relationship and the beginning of another is a complex matter .
18 You could almost think that was a stereo spread of one performance but if you listen to it on headphones you can hear it properly . ’
19 1771 This meeting also agreed That the sum of one shilling & sixpence Sterling be levied on each Quarter Land towards payment of Expences of a Dyke arround the Burial place in Kilchoman .
20 1771 This meeting also agreed That the sum of one shilling & sixpence Sterling be levied on each Quarter Land towards payment of Expences of a Dyke arround the Burial place in Kilchoman .
21 For the bargain price of one shilling and sixpence the audience could watch alternating film and stage shows .
22 The reverse of the coin is internationalism , a feature , some might say , of twentieth-century art ; not so uncommon either in other periods , where art historians struggle heroically to identify differences between the art of one country and another .
23 If they were n't sure , they why not select certain games only or certain areas of one country and then see what happened ?
24 A history teacher is content to cover the history of one country or continent over a few decades .
25 Will he give an undertaking today to give us information on recruitment levels , retention levels and the position of one base as compared with another before such a report is produced ?
26 If one assumes that there was an average of one complainant and four witnesses for each two persons accused , over one-half of all men appeared in a criminal court as a defendant , complainant or witness every year .
27 The home currency may appreciate in terms of one currency and yet depreciate in terms of another .
28 A scientific revolution corresponds to the abandonment of one paradigm and the adoption of a new one , not by an individual scientist only but by the relevant scientific community as a whole .
29 , Digby Augustus Stewart Mackworth ( 1848–1867 ) , poet , was born 8 February 1848 in Guernsey , the youngest in the family of one daughter and three sons of William Harcourt Isham Mackworth [ Dolben ] and his wife Frances Dolben , a distant cousin , who was joint heiress of the manor of Finedon , Northamptonshire , an estate they rebuilt extensively .
30 , John Hessell ( 1894–1982 ) , soldier , cipher-breaker , and cryptographer , was born in Bloomsbury , London , 25 May 1894 , the youngest in the family of one daughter and two sons of Alfred Hessell Tiltman , FRIBA , architect , and his wife Sarah Ann Jane Kerr .
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