Example sentences of "[num] [pers pn] [verb] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 to my senior command and in 1986 I informed my chief officers of the acceptance of my Ph.D .
2 Er seven to eleven I think it is .
3 In Chapters 5–8 I address myself to the topic of experiences from a phenomenological point of view .
4 At eight I had my first migraine ( I could not please her , I might as well join her ; they stopped soon after I left home ) , and I started to get rapidly and relentlessly short-sighted .
5 And er they had sold a car in eighteen ninety eight I think it was .
6 my husband and yes , just a minute , my husband arrived home from the war in nineteen forty eight I think it was or was it nineteen forty seven ?
7 it 's er nine eight I think it was
8 cos it 's forty six , fifty four and sixty eight I think it was
9 You do n't come under key stage until you go into wa er er year eight I think it is .
10 Three , four , five , six , seven , eight I start mine again then six
11 Pound fifty I think it is .
12 In 1972 I undertook my first race since leaving school 35 years earlier and managed 13.3 seconds for the 100m , ending last in the O50 final and lame in both hamstrings .
13 I do n't know whether you 'll think I 'm boasting but that is n't the case , but I never ever regretted it and it a great deal of respect for me , you know and I could see that and did appreciate it and I know the people appreciated it just the same and erm it 's gone on from then till now but about , I retired in seventy-three , I was sixty-five and I said I 'd only do what anybody wanted for me , cos they had me in for the tax and I never ever heard twenty-one I think it was or thirty-one in come and I 'd go before I could satisfy them at Walsall but er I 'd got , not got enough money to be taxed in the bank , which was true .
14 IN FEBRUARY 1985 I found myself on a flight scheduled for the Yemen Arab Republic , now called Yemen since its amalgamation with the People 's Democratic Republic of Yemen in May 1990 .
15 2 I think she 's glad to see me , not just because I give her treat food , but because she 's lonely .
16 ‘ If he had n't bunked off till I was forty I think it might have been better .
17 Anybody over forty I say it is a legitimate time to talk to people about self employment .
18 12 She shifts her body and flips her wings to keep balance , then looks at me and makes a new sound , like peeEP ; very sharp .
19 AT 2 she performed her first solo — as a bee emerging from a flower !
20 On Saturday 4th September 1993 we make our annual gesture of support for the Central Wales Line .
21 In March 1993 we announced our intention to offer for sale our interests in the Markham field , and adjacent uncontracted discoveries , proceeds from which will improve our financial position in 1993 .
22 Finally , in section 3.7 we turn our attention to another dimension of economic change , that of uneven development , and look at the ways in which the expansion of the service sector is also reshaping the map of employment by creating new lines of division and inequality between regions .
23 In chapter 2 we turned our attention to the various types of bonding between atoms , ions and molecules and saw how the bonding related to the structure and properties of matter .
24 In Act 2 they make their startling début after Domingo 's first important solo ; in Act 3 they reappear to congratulate him on his second .
25 In 1885 he obtained his doctorate with at thesis on the theory of invariants .
26 Count Geoffrey , by concentrating his forces on the conquest of Normandy , was able to recover the continental part of his wife 's inheritance by 1144 , and in 1150 he passed it on to his eldest son Henry Plantagenet , now twenty years old .
27 In 1881 he married his first cousin , Eliza , daughter of Franklin Stanley Cripps , a small shopkeeper in Wisbech .
28 In 1802 he joined his elder brother Daniel in founding a drapery business at 3 North Street , Brighton , where he drew and published ‘ A New and Correct Plan of Brighthelmstone ’ .
29 When , for the first time , the Reverend John Wesley stopped in Portadown , then a village of about 700 inhabitants , on Friday 10 April 1767 he made his oft-quoted remark that it was ‘ a place not troubled with any kind of religion . ’
30 In an advertisement in the Northampton Mercury of 27 April 1747 he describes himself simply as a millwright , but goes on to offer his services as a manufacturer and repairer of many kinds of agricultural machinery , weighbridges and ‘ mathematical and philosophical instruments ’ , as a designer of all kinds of mills , as a maker of ventilators for hospitals , gaols , granaries , or ships , and as a surveyor of gentlemen 's estates .
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