Example sentences of "[adj] [pron] with [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | " Who 's that other old girl , the common-prim one with the cat ? " |
2 | Another horse fell , this one with a leg bone shattered by a musket-ball . |
3 | And this one with a pre-invitation : |
4 | There was another one with a name new to us . |
5 | Another one with a chorus to learn , all about the wonderful joys of … |
6 | If I 'd had another one with a couple of |
7 | I I , If I 'd another one with a couple of |
8 | Do you want to do another one with the numbers in ? |
9 | Benjamin Titford — the name had always been a popular one with the Carpenter family — was born on 15 December 1786 , and was baptised along with his ill-fated sister Lydia and brother Charles Thynne at St John 's on 27 May 1792 , Whit Sunday . |
10 | For years the Government I served was a popular one with the people — but not with the British Government . |
11 | What it says is that it would be self-contradictory to posit something as a topic , while denying the possibility of referring to this something with the phrase " the same A " . |
12 | Well , pretty fair , because then they used to go down Botterman 's Bay and where they used to er , the dock was in the hold , that was all loose grain and they used to put four bushels to the , so they used a bushel skip like that , wh which was a wooden one with a handle each side and they 'd go into the wheat |
13 | His design for these chairs was a favourite one with the architect and was inspired by a well-known seated portrait of the Emperor . |
14 | The spot was clearly a favourite one with the crew and there had been several men dozing there when Owen and Mahmoud had appeared . |
15 | She added , as both gentleman turned to look , ‘ The old one with the fan and the eyeglass . ’ |
16 | The Mail began bingo as an answer to the bingo weapons of the Daily Star and the Sun in their circulation war and they dignified it with the name ‘ Casino ’ , but a heap of dung by any other name still smells the same . |
17 | ‘ Er — Jim 's just got to OK it with the boss , ’ he said uncertainly . |
18 | First you require a second enlarger , an old anything with a lens , together with something that will give you a reasonably diffused light . |
19 | First you require a second enlarger , an old anything with a lens , together with something that will give you reasonably diffuse light . |
20 | The second song was rather a sad one with the refrain of a forsaken lover or a widower : |
21 | Well they , I had to go to Road police station , London , it was quite good , the detective took , took me around that little area and er then when I got ready to collect to take him to Liverpool Street Station , I saw him for the first time , man about sixty one and he 'd got two suitcases , one lighter than the other , and while I was signing for him and his property I said to him , you take that light one and I 'll take the bigger one with the view to getting on the bus to get to Liverpool Street st but the inspector there was very good , he said I 'm not going to oh and I said to you take the light case I 'll take the high one , he said I ca n't carry anything , I got a rupture . |
22 | As they walked away Scarlet observed another woman bearing down on the many-coated one with the air of a person about to commit good works . |
23 | you know the little one with the glasses she 's about fortyish |
24 | The man , it was the bald one with the glasses , knelt down on both knees and grabbed the bottom and began to kiss it ardently . |
25 | Eighty-five miles is a long way this early in the season , and the course is a hard one with an assent of the Whistlefield on each of the four laps of Rosneath . |
26 | This task was identical to the previous one with the exception that Korean letters ( not phonologically codeable ) were used . |
27 | I much prefer this Bernstein performance to his later one with the Amsterdam Concertgebouw Orchestra , which is so self-indulgent and slow that the final Adagio loses both shape and momentum . |
28 | When overtures were received from the Czech resistance movement Vlasov was persuaded to allow his men to aid the anti-communist uprising in Prague on 7 May 1945 , in the vain hope of ingratiating themselves with the allies , and of winning sanctuary from an independent Czech government . |
29 | Systematically he had gouged at each one with a screwdriver . |
30 | They were rather small and narrow , arched , each one with a centre pillar and a capital of carved marble . |