Example sentences of "some the " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Now , he concluded gloomily , some the best examples of the Gibbons technique were destroyed and where was the expertise today to replace them ? |
2 | Many Russian exiles have long suspected that spies had been planted in their midst by the KGB , and for some the advertisements confirmed their darkest fears . |
3 | With some the feet . |
4 | With some the shoulders . |
5 | Now this may sound an anathema to some Evangelical ears because for some the Church is but a secondary fact in Christian truth , coming a long way after personal faith and experience . |
6 | The pace is utterly manic , the bickering relentless and the colour lurid ; to some The Simpsons is a half-hour headache . |
7 | Instead she nominated some the sexiest men in the entertainment world . |
8 | For some the spur may be that it would be more useful to be able to read the health and safety rules of the factory in which they work , or to be able to make sense of the words in the mail order catalogue in which they are required to shop . |
9 | for some the high cost of machinery could not be justified when only relatively small areas were being cropped and contractors were not readily available . |
10 | For some the counselling was particularly appreciated : |
11 | DSM 's work has two purposes : to attempt to solve some of the practical difficulties associated with successful restoration , such as dampness and the type of pigments used in the paintings ; and to judge some the hypotheses put forward by art historians on their scientific merit ( this is being done with the plasterwork from St Servatius ) . |
12 | In some the stranger is simply frozen . |
13 | Walking : The local tourist office offers an award scheme and there are clearly marked paths for you to follow some the ideal length for an afternoon stroll . |
14 | In some the telegraph operator was given an elevated office in the tower . |
15 | For some the only problem encountered with dogs is getting the brown stuff out of their outsoles , but dogs are clearly more of a pest than this , if our postbag is anything to go by . |
16 | But for some the undertow is too strong and they are sucked away to navigate unexplored tributaries of the Amazon , encounter the tribes of remotest Papua New Guinea , cross Australia by camel , or Asia by bicycle , or walk to the North Pole — alone . |
17 | For some the trend of the 1990s is to move away from package holidays towards the individual tour where travel agents help the client to arrange a personal itinerary . |
18 | In some the dominance of the lords was strong , in others the tradition of freedom much stronger . |
19 | For some the love of the chase becomes an end in itself . |
20 | Yet in the excitement of becoming a parent it is easy to forget that for some the impact can be not so dissimilar from that caused by the discovery of a rival lover . |
21 | To some the latter is paradoxical ; to others it is nonsense . |
22 | With some the problem of premises is theoretical ; with others it is practical . |
23 | For some the stay was to be very brief ; next morning ( 7th . ) |
24 | Some gone for soldiers , some the streets they parade |
25 | For some the Refuge Centre is the only hope of a new and different life . |
26 | The Scots had been entirely unprepared for this , thus far into their own country , and were engaged in herding the great herd of Gilsland cattle across the Dornock Water 's estuary , some one side of the river , some the other . |
27 | Whilst for some the experience of ageing does bring with it a degree of social disengagement , it is far from being a ‘ natural ’ or inevitable event . |
28 | For some the state should ideally not get involved in public communication . |
29 | For some the conjunction has seemed obvious , for others itself a sign of fancy stretched beyond the bounds of credibility . |
30 | However , what has often gone unnoticed is that in most cases this does not happen and , even more interesting , in some the outcome is what has been called ‘ outstanding ’ ; that is to say , the individual turns out to be a highly competent and sometimes very creative adult . |