Example sentences of "[noun sg] [prep] [pron] in the " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Siddy 's ’ fiancée , Beth , would cut and set her hair for her in the late ‘ twenties , but by the time the couple married in June , 1930 , Granny was very near the end .
2 There is no provision for one in the Bill .
3 But she did n't find out he had made no provision for her in the event of his death until Elizabeth could no longer withhold her sentiments .
4 We may never see one another again , but nobody cares , because there 's no provision for it in the rules .
5 More did not — but included provision for it in the other types of school .
6 He thinks there 's a part for me in the new play at the Queen 's . ’
7 The pity of it was that she had n't made a bigger part for herself in the night 's scenario ; she was getting polite nods and hellos from people that she already knew slightly , and curious glances from most of the others .
8 He then became the resident guitarist at ECM and therefore has played guitar for everyone in the modern movement : for example , Paul Bley , Mike Gibbs , Eberhard Weber , Paul Motian and Jan Gabarek .
9 A white cow used to provide milk for everyone in the locality , but it was customary for only one pailful to he taken .
10 To a king about to embark on war , the support of wise counsels and mighty powers was indeed essential , and the men honoured in 1337 repaid the king 's generosity by loyal support for him in the forthcoming campaigns .
11 The idea of a National Government was primarily an idea of the political centre and right : there was hardly any support for it in the Labour party — except from Mosley , and he was moving rapidly to the right .
12 The professional qualifications material provides stimulating learning support for anyone in the hotel and catering industry .
13 The bit about everyone in the in a dinner queue .
14 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 .
15 He had no idea where he was , except that it must be somewhere in the wilds of Wales , well hidden from any possibility of rescue ; and he took his first unwilling look about him in the conviction that captivity could mean nothing better than solitude , close confinement and squalor .
16 He well recalls a couplet about him in The Times : ‘ He was right , dead right , as he walked along ; but he was just as dead as if he 'd been wrong . ’
17 The fact that he also made a little money for himself in the process was considered only reasonable by the majority of fans .
18 Word processors are more like DTP packages , and spreadsheets do just about everything bar make the money for you in the first place .
19 ‘ It should not be so difficult a decision for him in the best interests of an organisation in which he believes and for which I know he has worked so hard . ’
20 ‘ It should not be so difficult a decision for him in the best interests of an organisation in which he believes and for which I know he has worked so hard . ’
21 I had hoped to find the original bill for the chandelier in the Abercorn Papers , but a day 's search for them in the Belfast Record Office revealed nothing : in true British fashion , all feed and stapling bills were meticulously preserved and carefully tied in small bundles , but bills for plate and jewels seem not to have been preserved .
22 It was published in March 1986 , five months after Jones ' arrival at BYU , and he decided to give a talk about it in the departmental weekly colloquium .
23 I was advised that before studying psionic medicine it would be appropriate to learn homoeopathy and this I duly did , leaving my post in the genetics department for one in the homoeopathic hospital .
24 Believe me , I know — I have reason to know now , for while you were gone I 've tried it and am waiting even now for the blow to fall ! — that there is no future for me in the world I left behind so long ago . ’
25 A first round victory caught everyone 's attention , and Swift kept close tabs on him for the rest of the year , even fielding a car for him in the 25th anniversary race at Silverstone and again in the Irish Festival .
26 Duke of Duke of thingy , it was er on at the Palace it was erm Duke of , there was an advert for it in the paper the other day
27 And we had to move all them , there were a lot of hooha about it in the paper about what , a year ago ?
28 Marlowe refuses to recognise the fact making a living for oneself in the countryside involves strenuous work and long hours of toil in order to reap the rewards afterwards .
29 A man as highly educated as Augustine changed his mind about them in the course of his life .
30 Had he changed his mind about her in the cold light of morning ?
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