Example sentences of "[coord] [adv] in the [num] " in BNC.

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1 This Gotteschalk , a precursor of Luther , even to renouncing his Vows , might be thought in his intransigent predestinarian vision to figure some of the later Evangelicals of our day , and Neighbour Pliable perhaps a satire upon those like myself , who believe that Christianity does not consist in the idolatrous presence of the Deity in a piece of bread , nor yet in the five points of metaphysic faith .
2 Boden was not among his listeners , nor anywhere in the three small , crowded rooms .
3 The world has changed radically since the admission of individuals such as Marx and vastly in the 40 years since the 1951 convention was drawn up .
4 Many authorities responded reluctantly , some resisting the government 's wishes , and only in the 1970s did the number of pupils in comprehensive schools exceed the number attending selective schools .
5 Here January temperatures are below freezing point ( -0.5°C , 31°F ) and only in the three summer months does the average temperature rise above 15.5°C ( 60°F ) , July attaining 21°C ( 70°F ) .
6 In this century , and especially in the 1950s , the inspectors ' functions became more concerned with giving professional advice and spreading good practice .
7 These factors probably explain the falling off of trade union activity among seamen in the north-east and elsewhere in the 1860s and early 1870s .
8 Late in the 1370s and early in the 1380s the world order , already upset by long war , seemed set to suffer yet further disruption .
9 ‘ — and once in the seventies .
10 This momentum throughout the industry was difficult to halt and later in the 1970s with the second oil shock and over capacity of 40 per cent , an added pressure element came from a weak US dollar which allowed relatively cheap American products on to the market on this side of the Atlantic .
11 when I was sixteen because it 's then I started to get these free passes and I had a sister then who lived at Rye and I had never been across London so the next door neighbour came with me to see me across London er because I was so young you see and I said right as long as you show me across London I can come back alone , you see , and so I came back alone and I , that 's when I started , so from sixteen and er and as I say I went to Cambridge in the nineteen thirty one , it was the last day of well say nineteen thirty two , you see , and , and also in the twenties I was going on holiday alone and I went to once er to the Isle of Man and when I was er I , I sat next , well being by myself , you see , they put me in , to a little table near the wall .
12 A full list of projects will appear in JFIT News and also in the 1991 JFIT Annual report due to be published in October .
13 It was restored both inside and out in the 1860s by V. I. Ullmann and B. Wachsmann , although there are some remains of 14C frescos .
14 Moreover , the effect occurred in the early post-mixing period and mainly in the 0–4 age group , in keeping with findings in rural new towns in their early growth period .
15 During Edward 's reign , and particularly in the 1320s , government administration and bureaucracy grew in scale and complexity .
16 But in the 1920s £200 was a high price for a Matisse and even in the Thirties his work rarely made over £1000 .
17 In the 1860s , 1870s , and even in the 1880s , the pride of the ‘ old journalism ’ would be replete with leaders and the texts of politicians ' speeches .
18 But the many miles of treeless river inhibits recolonization by otters , and even in the 1980s there have been cases of water authority workmen felling known otter holts .
19 The Barley Mow brewery was among the very last to still brew draught London porter , which it made until the late 1930s , and even in the 1950s it was famous for another dark beer , its Main Line mild .
20 Phil Holder was a rugged little midfield ballwinner and this barrel-chested , chirpy fellow was a useful asset in our 1975–76 run to the FA Cup semi-final and then in the 1976–77 promotion team .
21 This was what she had achieved , and indeed in the 1950s when she was at work it was an enviable position for a woman .
22 Without an awareness of this it becomes very difficult to explain such phenomena as , for instance , the rise of ‘ independent ’ record companies in the 1940s and 1950s , and again in the 1970s ; the ‘ war ’ between the American Society of Composers , Authors and Publishers ( ASCAP ) and Broadcast Music Incorporated ( BMI ) in the 1940s ; the jaundiced reception by Tin Pan Alley of syncopated dance music and , later , of rock 'n' roll ; music-political struggles within the BBC ; the often stylistically heterogeneous content of the hit parades ; numerous policy arguments between musicians and their record companies ; and so on .
23 As Hood notes , however , they came into ‘ high fashion in the 1940s and again in the 1960s when the Fulton Committee endorsed the idea of government growth outside Whitehall by ‘ hiving-off ’ units from civil service departments to non-departmental bodies ' ( 1981 , p. 100 ) .
24 The spontaneity , excitement and vigour which had attended pop music 's greatest flowerings — in the mid-Fifties and again in the mid-Sixties — had , once again , evaporated ; the market-place was now the sole arbiter of style .
25 At Christchurch , proposals to replace the Gothic station of 1877 had been made at the time of the First World War and again in the 1930s , but it was not demolished until the 1950s , when it was replaced by a modern station more successful than most .
26 More changes came in 1969 — 71 and again in the 1980s , which was a decade dominated by battles over new technology and the establishment of new titles .
27 In the 1290s and again in the 1330s the pressure of taxation and resistance to the crown 's recruiting methods led to political crises which undermined the king 's ability to wage war successfully .
28 Unfortunately , that kind of writing went out of fashion almost instantly , and certainly in the nineteen twenties and thirties , was replaced by a completely different tradition , which has er , influenced our expectations and perhaps explains why the book seems so old fashioned .
29 That might well have been true in the early 1960s but not in the 1990s , so let us not revive a distinction which has thankfully been eliminated .
30 That might well have been true in the early 1960s but not in the 1990s , so let us not revive a distinction which has thankfully been eliminated All kinds of research in education have gone far beyond this narrow form .
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