Example sentences of "[prep] [art] [adj] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 Yeah , but it 's just really for the making up for the odd one I
2 If planning a set of three pictures , you could arrange the flowers in curves for the two outer pictures , and create a solid design for the middle one ( see p. 81 ) .
3 More than can be said for the lower one , he wrote .
4 1993 is a year to really find the right person , so it may be that an unsatisfactory relationship has to go in order for the appropriate one to come in .
5 The Kirk Treasurer was told to charge " for the best 5/- each time it is used , and at the rate of 2/- each time for the Coarser one . "
6 It may mean changing your own procedures , but if it also means changing your bank balance for the better it may be well worth it .
7 It I think forty five they started negotiating forty five forty to forty seven and er when we tried to alter the national agreement or change it in our minds for the better you always had the solid block of these wee fellows up and down the country sticking by the national agreement because they got such a good deal out of it it brought their standards right up to the the best that was going .
8 That particular luxury did not appear until M. Georges Nagelmackers had copied Mr Pullman and introduced them in 1883 , and even then they were for the rich who could afford to travel on the ‘ Orient Express ’ .
9 I believe she used to be so reluctant about marrying people because marriage is important to her , she 's only been waiting for the right one . ’
10 Its sound provided the first syllable of Poirot 's name ‘ poir ’ , and for the second one need look no further than the French word ‘ perdreau ’ , meaning ‘ a young partridge ’ .
11 Yes I just want to explain very quickly for people who do n't know what we 're talking about , Leslie , because a lot of people join us by the minute , er , MPs on the Commons ' Heritage Committee , have said , they think it 's a very good idea , that if you have more than one telly , you should pay twenty pounds for the second one , and who knows , twenty pounds for the third , and twenty pounds extra for the fourth .
12 As for the second one your use of rhyme pushes back the frontiers of english literature .
13 because there 's no sound feed and altogether , oh yes , for the second , we , we did two plays and for the second one , they did n't produce a script
14 Absolutely , does it make sense for , for husband and wife over there to wait for the second one to have a heart attack , or the second one to have a cancer before it pays out ,
15 With the playback that in fact erm as has said it showed me what in fact I was doing right and wrong , erm I 've been on television before once when I was running the London marathon but this time it was actually me and me alone in a work element and I could in fact see what I was doing and why I was doing it and understand in fact the corrections from the morning to in fact the afternoon presentation when I came back for the second one .
16 ‘ I shut my eyes for the second one , ’ joked MacDonald .
17 So , while for the first of these two failures Owen may be criticised , for the second he must be excused .
18 This means that for the first one the doubt is ‘ simple ’ and can be cleared up in a straightforward way , but for the second it is ‘ compound ’ and needs much greater care .
19 What is certain is that in the EEC there is literally one law for the private company and another for the state-owned one .
20 The British delegation of eight comprised of two Principals of Oral Schools for the Deaf which had a combined total of less than 25 students !
21 The Hugh Bell School dosed on 1948 , and the deaf classes were transferred to Homewood in Orchard Road , in enlarged premises ready to receive pupils from the Stockton School for the Deaf which was also to close .
22 Two schools for the deaf which were opened in the 1900s were both from the start to establish a pure oralist tradition .
23 In London , the Old Kent Road and Anerley Schools for the Deaf which were both occupied by civil defence and military authorities at the time were also substantially damaged and needed major repairs after the war before they could be reoccupied .
24 This role was conceded to the National Institute for the Deaf which became The Royal National Institute for the Deaf , ( RNID ) in 1961 .
25 The origin of the present-day adult deaf organisational network was sowed one Sunday evening in 1822 in St. Andrew 's Square , Glasgow where John Anderson , former Headmaster of the Glasgow Institution for the deaf who was now teaching privately from his house in St. Andrew 's Square , held a prayer meeting for a number of pupils and adults .
26 Donaldson 's Hospital School for the Deaf was evacuated to Cockburnspath and North Berwick ; the nursery department of the Royal Schools for the Deaf , Manchester , was evacuated to Middlewich in Cheshire ; the Old Kent Road School for the Deaf to St. Alban , Glamorgan , temporarily before relocating at Banstead , Surrey , where they were joined by Anerley School for the Deaf who had originally evacuated to the Royal Cross School , Preston thence to the Royal West of England School at Exeter , hurriedly evacuating the latter following the Baedeker Raids on Exeter in 1942 .
27 The PWA went on to achieve an impressive record in building schools , civic buildings and hospitals , but more rapid and extensive programmes of public works were required to provide relief for the millions who remained unemployed .
28 A sheltered workshop for the disabled which is threatened with closure has won a temporary reprieve .
29 If there were problems for the disabled they could be ironed out .
30 From the start of welfare provision for the disabled it was recognized that social workers would have a key role to play in putting the handicapped in touch with the provision available .
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