Example sentences of "[coord] his [num ord] [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | As I said before , Klemperer 's conducting invariably fuelled controversy , and I can not imagine a more controversial performance than his 1968 recording of Mahler 's Seventh Symphony , which comes in a boxed set with the appropriate coupling of Klemperer 's own Second Symphony and his Seventh String Quartet , the latter performed by the Philharmonia Quartet ( ) . |
2 | And his ninth goal of the season was enough to earn the Gunners their fifth successive League victory after Palace 's own top scorer , Eddie McGoldrick , had equalised an early opener by the impressive Merson . |
3 | Marilyn Brown says she accepts her son now wo n't be home for Christmas and his 29th birthday on January the 2nd . |
4 | Heini and his fifth wife , Carmen — Tita to her friends — are thus free to concentrate on his art collection , the world 's most valuable in private hands , if you exclude those of the Queen and of Prince Hans Adam of Liechtenstein . |
5 | McAllister 's 1st goal was a penalty , and his 2nd goal which was the equalizer was from a very tight angle . |
6 | So was his position as heir presumptive , a necessary acknowledgement in order to remove any doubt created by the fact that he was the son of a divorced father and his second wife . |
7 | Bob and his second wife Beryl , 49 , say they 'd never sell their dream house — estimated to be worth £500,000 . |
8 | The 60,000-acre estate is home to the duke , 37 , and his second wife , former interior designer Virginia Wynne-Williams . |
9 | These telephone calls provoke long and furious rows between Mr Smith and his second wife . |
10 | These telephone calls provoke long and furious rows between Mr Smith and his second wife . |
11 | It mentioned that he lived with his mother , Lady Ursula Berowne , and his second wife in one of the few extant houses built by Sir John Soane and that he had one child by his first marriage , 24-year-old Sarah Berowne , who was active in left-wing politics and who was thought to be estranged from her father . |
12 | In all , he 's given over $1 billion to charity , retaining about $1.4 billion for himself , his daughter and his second wife Leonore . |
13 | One or two , like his solicitor and his second wife 's psychiatrist , took their leave after no more than 90 minutes . |
14 | Burun was sitting on a chest which had been used to carry the food , and his second wife , Kiku , whom men called the Regal Lily , was standing behind him dressing his hair while he admired himself in a hand-held mirror . |
15 | Brian had given Scarlet the impression that , if it had not been for his first wife and her child , and his second wife and her child , he would have been living a life of carefree splendour in a house adjacent to the park . |
16 | , Henry George Bonavia- ( 1847–1917 ) , founder of Trinity College of Music , London , was born 30 June 1847 in Valetta , Malta , the eldest surviving son of William Hunt , former private secretary to the bishop of Jerusalem , and his second wife , Marietta Bonavia , daughter of a Maltese doctor of Italian extraction . |
17 | , Charles Eamer ( 1837–1907 ) , artist in stained glass and church decoration , was born 29 June 1837 at Ovingdean Hall , Sussex , the fifth son and seventh and last child of Nathaniel Kemp , JP who died when his son was six , and his second wife Augusta Caroline , the daughter of Sir John Eamer , a former lord mayor of London . |
18 | At some stage he married again and his second wife predeceased him . |
19 | , Johann Christian ( 1735–1782 ) , composer , was born 5 September 1735 in Leipzig , the sixth and youngest son and the eleventh of the thirteen children of Johann Sebastian Bach and his second wife Anna Magdalena , daughter of Johann Caspar Wilcke , court trumpeter . |
20 | , Emily Wilding ( 1872–1913 ) , feminist , was born in Blackheath , London , 11 October 1872 , the second of three children and elder daughter of Charles Davison , businessman , and his second wife Margaret Caisley , who had been a housekeeper before marriage . |
21 | , ( Edward ) Hesketh ( Gibbons ) ( 1887–1964 ) , actor and biographer , was born 20 February 1887 in Hawford , Worcestershire , the second of two sons and four children of Thomas Henry Gibbons Pearson , gentleman farmer , churchwarden , and amateur sportsman , and his second wife Amy Mary Constance , eldest daughter of George Hesketh Biggs , vicar of Ettington . |
22 | , Ernest William ( 1864–1919 ) , craftsman and architect , was born in Leicester , 21 December 1864 , the fourth child and second son in the family of three sons and four daughters of Josiah Gimson , iron-founder , engineer , and industrial entrepreneur , who established the Vulcan works in Leicester , and his second wife Sarah Ansell . |
23 | , Sampson ( 1699–1779 ) , founder of Lloyds Bank , was born in Birmingham 15 July 1699 , the second son and second child in the family of two sons and one daughter of Sampson Lloyd , a Quaker ironmonger , and his second wife Mary ( sister of Sir Ambrose Crowley , q.v. ) , daughter of Ambrose Crowley of Stourbridge , another Quaker ironmonger and nailer . |
24 | , Sidney Arthur Kilworth ( 1922–1943 ) , poet , was born 27 May 1922 in Dartford , Kent , the only child of Captain Reginald Keyes of the Queen 's Own Royal West Kent Regiment , and his second wife Edith , daughter of the Revd Arthur Blackburn , rector of St Paul 's , Bradford . |
25 | , James ( 1752–1812 ) , barrister , was born 9 March 1752 in Thetford , Norfolk , the second child and elder son in the family of ten children of James Mingay , surgeon , of Thetford , and his second wife Dorothy , the daughter of William Fuller of Caldecot , Huntingdonshire . |
26 | Curwen 's estates lay on the west Cumberland coalfield , and he took a particular interest in the collieries inherited from his father and his second wife , as well as others which he purchased and leased in the area . |
27 | , John Edward Courtenay ( 1853–1925 ) , author , was born 6 June 1853 at King Street , Hanley , Staffordshire , the son of Edward Fisher Bodley , commercial traveller and later a wealthy pottery owner , and his second wife Mary Ridgway . |
28 | He and his second wife settled in the family house at Stanley Pontlarge , Gloucestershire , and here he resumed his literary programme , writing over forty books , covering canals , railways , motor cars , and many other aspects of engineering history . |
29 | , Patrick Henry ( 1879–1916 ) , teacher , journalist , poet , and Irish revolutionary , was born 10 November 1879 in Dublin , the elder son and second of the four children of James Pearse , stone carver , of London , Birmingham , and Dublin , and his second wife Margaret , shop assistant , one of two surviving daughters of Patrick Brady , coal factor , of Dublin . |
30 | , Sir John Alexander ( 1871–1949 ) , author and editor of popular works of reference , was born in Alexandria , Dunbartonshire , 27 February 1871 , the second in a family of two sons and one daughter of James Hammerton , clog-maker of Oldham , and his second wife Janet , shopwoman , daughter of Alexander Lang , mason . |