Example sentences of "[prep] [verb] [pron] [art] [num ord] " in BNC.

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1 Fearful of waking him a second time I waited .
2 On the outbreak of World War I Herbert joined the Irish Guards , despite his near-blindness , by the simple method of buying himself a second lieutenant 's uniform and falling in as the regiment boarded ship for France in August 1914 .
3 The thought of facing her the next day was quite terrifying , but not an obligation Meryl intended to shirk .
4 they , they should of done , but they did n't , the point is they should n't of left it the last minute , they should of done it in the first place
5 After Dan Salmon 's funeral , Charlie tried to read the Daily Chronicle every morning in the hope of discovering what the second battalion , Royal Fusiliers , were up to and where his father might be .
6 He could torture her all he wanted , but he would not succeed in breaking her a second time .
7 A clip round the ear has more chance of preventing him from doing something a second time than bringing all these other agencies in .
8 He coughed a little nervously , before giving her a last look .
9 Knowing what Edmund has done to his real father might have given Cornwall pause before proclaiming himself the next one .
10 It is a good sound bite , but it is not any better for hearing it the second time .
11 Dave said , ‘ The most frightening part of the jump was climbing out of the plane and having to crawl along the wing before jumping , but I look forward to doing it a second time just for fun ! ’
12 If she were his mother , and he let himself be shot without giving her a last chance of looking into his eyes ?
13 People strolled past without giving him a second look — couples hand in hand , families with pushchairs , groups of friends looking for a good spot to picnic .
14 The troubles in Kent dragged on sporadically for some two years ; in August 1450 a certain William Parmenter virtually proclaimed himself Cade 's successor by calling himself the second captain of Kent , in April 1451 there were troubles fomented by Henry Hasilden , and in May 1452 there was yet further disorder ( 42 ) .
15 In any event , it is surely wrong , for the sake of a few weeks , to decide on the principle of the Bill by giving it a Second Reading while hon. Members still do not have the Stoner report .
16 Sister Murphy had been the last nurse to be with Sister Edith Cavell , and King George V had honoured her by making her the first to receive a medal for bravery at one of his levees .
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