Example sentences of "[adv prt] [prep] [art] [num] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 As the recession 's gone on through the eighties and enters the nineties , we can see that the number of single households , households with just one person , is increasing rapidly .
2 It was the Friday after the twelfth was always the gatheri Glen Ayloch gathering and is yet , and is going on for a hundred and s something year a hundred and What did I we say a hundred and twenty years since it was started I think .
3 If the number 1 lefthand light is on for the 580 and the modular electronics and the number 1 righthand light on for earlier machines , then as we saw last month the first stitch of the pattern will fall to the right of the N1 cam , that is on needle number 14 to the left of centre .
4 and put the other piece in between the two and make a sandwich
5 the sizes though , they usually only have them in about a three and a four do n't they ?
6 Lyle , who has missed the cut twice in his only four European Tour appearances this year , came in with a 68 and declared himself well-satisfied .
7 The one American corps ( down from the two that were there before the Gulf war ) and a couple of German ones will probably remain national formations .
8 Gently they lifted the bedraggled form as Bert came lumbering down from the 3 and 4 landing , with Gilbert Forbes behind him , and behind him the trembling form of Jessie , wringing her hands .
9 ( In this way they were of course only following the examples set down in the 1820s and '30s by British visitors to America such as Captain Basil Hall or Mrs Frances Trollope. ) ln 1850 the Teetotal Times recorded an ‘ atrocious outrage ’ .
10 That structure of international regulation broke down in the 1970s and has been followed by a period of instability where it is uncertain whether US hegemony can be re-established or whether a different mode of regulation under Japanese or European domination will be constructed .
11 But the old pub had burnt down in the 1960s and been replaced by a more profitable and thrusting enterprise .
12 The distribution of life expectancy across countries is not symmetrical : the lower half of the distribution is more spread out than the upper half ( figure 11.7 ) ; many countries are pushing up against what looks like some kind of a ceiling of around seventy-seven years , while some poorer countries trail down in the forties and two countries ( Sierra Leone and Guinea ) even and leaf display of raw data register a staggering thirty-eight years .
13 What they used to do is get the er instructors used to come up and used to take the women down on a six and eight seated sleds , sleigh , toboggans
14 That brings it down to a hundred and ninety six for the first year .
15 I fish such a bait on a 14 hook , or go down to a 16 if the bream are being finicky .
16 But in the end , at that last hour , it comes down to the 15 and everything we do is focused down on that last hour . ’
17 but Bob and I did , I could , I could remember the day we moved in to a hundred and eleven er we 'd never , never been upstairs in a house before you see we 'd been brought up in a bungalow and we 'd never ever been upstairs and the thoughts of going upstairs to bed , you know , was fantastic
18 It was only when I was actually up there and the music had stopped , and I found myself looking down at a hundred or so expectant faces , that I remembered the magnitude of the task in front of me .
19 Conversely , he was five over for the par-fives and did not have one birdie in eight attempts .
20 It was just an alien little pop paper left over from the '60s and that market was n't really there anymore .
21 Many of the older people found it difficult to throw off the ‘ criminal , associations which had carried over from the fifties and sixties .
22 It takes us from the 19th century through to the 1930s and 1940s and the pioneering work of a number of embroiderers , in particular Constance Howard , who in 1951 was invited to make a large-scale work for the Festival of Britain .
23 In Europe the craze for motoring took off in the twenties and thirties , helped in 1931 by the launching of the first cross-Channel ferry specifically designed to carry cars and their passengers .
24 Making up yardage charts started in America in the late 1950s , took off in the 1960s and came to Britain in the 1970s .
25 ‘ … the idea of pedestrian/vehicle segregation began to take off in the 1950s and much of the pioneer work was done in the new towns .
26 After the Corporate Relations ’ press officer 's wedding in August , Emma and new husband Tim Godfrey will jet off on the nine and a half hour flight from Heathrow to Grand Cayman via Miami .
27 The new novel has married the pair and moved them on into the mid-Sixties and from the provinces to London , where Patrick works misgivingly in a fashionable publishing-house .
28 There were countless small libraries that ran on into the 1930s and even later , right down to the small cornershop lending libraries of the kind George Orwell worked in ( it is strange how , when you get down to the basic phenomena of literacy in England , he keeps cropping up ) .
29 Tonight she would far rather have been getting on with a hundred and one other things , but conscience had dictated that she must get the books finished first .
30 but er , as I say I ca n't remember precisely , I just scanned it and give it to Mick who was out the door like , Lesley put her house up for a hundred and twenty six erm , one how much is it ?
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