Example sentences of "[pron] the [adj] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Professor Donaldson was so irate at my letter in the Times , which he considered to reflect upon English architects in general , that he proposed moving the Institute to reverse the recommendation of their council to award to me the annual Royal Gold Medal of the Institute , and was only dissuaded from attempting to inflict that gratuitous dishonour upon me by strong remonstrances . |
2 | ‘ Any chance of anyone passing me the odd anabolic steroid , this week ? |
3 | As I left the peaceful sleeping village , the mist over the marshes was rising , to show me the great unknown world I was entering . |
4 | She was immediately recognisable , though she 'd had the scarf on as she sped past me the only other time I 'd seen her . |
5 | By the time we met I had almost reached The Old Castle Inn at Old Sarum and good old Dad bought me the largest ginger beer I 've ever had . |
6 | Several months into my secondary education , this working provided what was for me the greatest locospotting thrill of the decade . |
7 | Nevertheless , this seems to me the greatest short poem ever written by Wordsworth , comparable to Dr Johnson 's magnificent exposure of The Vanity of Human Wishes . |
8 | After a hundred yards or so I could see behind me the whole cliffed extent of the headland , and the house . |
9 | but just being on the bench gives me the tiniest little bit of hope … |
10 | Lorna Wood , a promotion activist working for the industry , gave me the full shock-horror story : ‘ People knew raisins were good for them . |
11 | The Sultan , Sir Hassanal Bolkiah , in whom the 1959 written Constitution vests supreme executive authority , presides over and is advised and assisted by a Council of Cabinet Ministers , a Religious Council and a Privy Council . |
12 | Pat Bavester was another person for whom the low fat diet worked where others had failed . |
13 | The change involved no religious problems because the larger colony had been launched for much the same reasons : a number of Puritans , of whom the largest single group came from East Anglia , had formed the Massachusetts Bay Company and obtained a charter to settle there in a firm determination to cut themselves off from England and the elements of Roman Catholicism they detected in the Church of England . |
14 | The third Duke of Roxburghe ( 1704–1804 ) , a collector on the grand scale after whom the exclusive bibliophilic Roxburghe Club was named , had a number of tracts concerning Mary Tofts , who perturbed the gynaecologists of her day by claiming to have given birth to a litter of rabbits . |
15 | The Serbs , with whom the right hon. Gentleman was fighting , who were fighting in the mountains , held up seven German divisions . |
16 | Other examples show however that the person of which the infinitive event is predicated is not always the speaker : ( 4 ) … but he was differently designed , full of desires and aspirations , itching at the fingers , lusting with the eyes , whom the whole variegated world could not satisfy with aspects . |
17 | In the Commonwealth , Callaghan ( previously a supporter of arms sales ) took a firm line in promoting a ban on sporting and other contacts with South Africa , and enforced the so-called Gleneagles Agreement with other Commonwealth countries , amongst whom the Conservative Prime Minister of Australia , Malcolm Fraser , proved an unexpectedly vigorous opponent of apartheid . |
18 | Somehow Finnan made sense of the tangled labyrinth , and brought them through the lanes and alleys of boats until they could see looming ahead of them the solid sunwashed stone of the city wall . |
19 | On one of them the poor little creature sat nursing his arm and looking very sorry for himself . |
20 | And you just hammer them the poor old cloth workers they 've got used to me now , they had an awful fit at the time , you ca n't do that . |
21 | The technology has certainly come of age and whereas battery powered tools can never compete in power with mains operated ones , their increasing sales have made them the fastest developing aspect of woodworking technology today . |
22 | ‘ My reward will be to give them the final yellow jersey in Manchester . ’ |
23 | Faye whispered , her eyes misting and her throat going froggy as she showed them the tiny black-haired bundle cradled tightly in her arms . |
24 | The horse , trained by David Barons , was called Seagram — and gave them the ultimate worldwide publicity without the cost of ownership ! |
25 | They also rejected Christie 's claim of a continuing rise in market share vis à vis Sotheby 's , resulting in a 49% share this season ( the highest since the mid-1950s ) and a 54% market share in Europe , making them the largest European auction house by sales . |
26 | We are committed to using the resources available to the health service to treat the maximum number of patients and to offer them the highest possible quality of health care . |
27 | ‘ The portacabin provided us with a way to offer them the best possible service under the circumstances . ’ |
28 | ‘ The lean-line droopiness of Michael Crawford and Oliver Reed 's big-drum bravado make them the best double act since Laurel and Hardy , ’ wrote Alexander Walker in the London Evening Standard . |
29 | Inside were four small diaries , three of them the cheap cardboard-backed variety , the fourth a blue leather-bound volume that Luce recognised . |
30 | It eats into their profits and for many of them the only good rabbit is a dead one . |