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

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1 Am I in a good position ?
2 Er I 'll just talk erm just talk briefly about emergency access money , cos this wi this covers one point I in the next session .
3 ‘ Am I in the same room ? ’ she asked .
4 ‘ Well , she went just for a lark , y'know , but this Mabel , she 's very serious , never got married , y'know — not surprisin' either when you see 'er in a strong light .
5 In a desperate attempt at humour someone in a neighbouring bed muttered half out loud : ‘ The suspense is killing me . ’
6 I mean I do n't write for therapeutic purposes in the sense that you might imagine , you know , someone in a mental hospital would paint or do pottery or conceivably write in order to relieve the inner tensions .
7 Although the Devil 's Advocate role is traditionally associated with high status roles , you should remember that someone in a low status position can still have opinions , can still provoke .
8 ‘ Because John does shift work I get very lonely and would like to write to someone in a similar position to myself , preferably living in the Sheffield area . ’
9 Kissing in this form , as a proper way to greet someone in a certain relation to oneself , is a social convention .
10 ‘ It is doubly appalling that someone in a professional capacity is involved in this sort of thing .
11 Emphasize the difficulty of saying anything at all with regard to religion which may not be received by someone in a misleading way .
12 Conversely , it is possible to take a sentence from a language teaching or linguistics textbook , go to the country where the language is spoken , say it to someone in a suitable situation , and achieve something by saying it .
13 If the information is accidentally overheard or intercepted in circumstances where the owner of the information utters it or transmits it by insecure means ( for example , by telling someone in a crowded room or by transmitting the information by a public telecommunications system ) an obligation of confidence might not be imposed on the person obtaining the information in this manner .
14 Mr Deaves is treated just like someone in a one-bedroom flat .
15 Second surprise was the music — a soft waltz coming to her through deep blue dusk , strings and woodwind , as if someone in a grand house up on the hill had just opened the door of the ballroom .
16 This is a right to follow , and take , the proceeds of a sale where the owner 's goods are disposed of by someone in a fiduciary relationship with the owner .
17 However , it remains possible that people do see the support which they give to elderly relatives as part of a two-way pattern which stretches over time and across generations , and where they themselves will benefit ultimately from the support of someone in a younger generation .
18 Someone in a white coat came up to them .
19 The scenes of destitution which the journalists could not be prevented from glimpsing-it is impossible to put someone in a hermetic bubble all the time , even for ten days — had not apparently impaired their appetites .
20 2.24 This type of person can be compared with a younger man in a less promising position , or perhaps someone in a hazardous occupation such as a steel erector or a steeplejack .
21 Tom Berenger is an amnesia-suffering crash victim who suspects he has murdered someone in the stylish thriller Shattered .
22 Most likely there will be someone in the close family or a reliable friend .
23 ‘ Put me through to the police office , please , ’ he said to someone in the outer office .
24 There could be someone in the outside world who is prepared to take over and put money into the club .
25 ‘ And someone in the Interior Ministry might blow the whistle on you ? ’
26 Ideally someone in the ferreting party will be given the task of removing each rabbit as soon as it is caught up .
27 The figures in Appendix I , Table 4 suggest that paying off credit agreements typically absorbs roughly twice as high a proportion of income for someone in the lowest income group as it does for people in higher income groups .
28 There was always something for someone in the criminal world .
29 Around 1.7 million of these were looking after someone in the same household ; 1.4 million were providing help or supervision for at least twenty hours a week ; and 3.7 million were carrying the main responsibility for providing that help ( Green , 1988 ) .
30 Again in the 45–60 age group , noticeably higher proportions of unmarried women were caring for someone in the same household , were the main carers of their disabled relatives and friends , and were caring for over twenty hours a week than were either their married or male counterparts ( Green , 1988 , pp. 9–10 ) .
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