Example sentences of "[be] [prep] [art] [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | Ed King was busily erecting the cage we 'd had in Covent Garden ; it was proving to be worth every penny of the £250 we 'd paid for it . |
2 | Prior to the coup attempt the applications approved by the Philippine Board of Investments for 1989 had increased by 128 per cent to be worth a total of $781,600,000 . |
3 | They must be worth a mint of money . |
4 | In June 1989 Burmin estimated the deposit it had discovered on Croagh Patrick might be worth a minimum of £30 million . |
5 | GOLF 'S 1993 European Volvo Tour will be worth £24.75 million , a 12.5 per cent increase for 39 events in 19 different countries — 16 of which will be worth a minimum of £600,000 . |
6 | The exceptions are sufficiently rare to be worth a study on their own ; it was quite a challenge for designers to make effective use of a relatively small circular area with a hole in the middle . |
7 | They could be worth a lot of money one day . |
8 | However , your pension may be worth a lot of money and , especially as you approach retirement , it is important that you should know the main essentials , including any options that may still be available to you . |
9 | gon na be worth a lot of money , with some people you 've got to give them a couple of free tickets |
10 | You have a case here which must be worth a lot of money , yet there is argument over whether somebody needs an electric toothbrush , how many toilet tissues he is going to use , etc . ’ |
11 | This tapes gon na be worth a lot of money is n't it . |
12 | That 's I want , do n't do n't chuck old and ancient things away that might be worth a lot of money later on . |
13 | Its procedures often seemed too specific to be worth the candle of locking someone up . |
14 | Because stores need to restock hot CDs quickly , the savings from buying abroad would not be worth the delay in delivery . |
15 | That movement alone would be worth the price of this CD . |
16 | ‘ It might be worth the price of a new car to get away from you ! ’ she seethed , letting off the handbrake . |
17 | If the job is very important it may be worth the cost of sending some one whose work you know well to cover the assignment . |
18 | Undaunted I was sure it would be worth the effort of breaking them in — and it was . |
19 | If you have large draughty windows on the east- and north-facing walls , it might be worth the expense for the resulting extra comfort . |
20 | There was the war horse to be thought of : a fine animal might be worth the value of a small lordship or , put differently , in the mid-fifteenth century a charger could cost a French man-at-arms the equivalent of anything from six months ' to two years ' wages . |
21 | In a very rich catalogue of experience , the Great Patriotic War may be worth the balance of the collection . |
22 | In such cases it would be worth the trouble of introducing worms from elsewhere . |
23 | Yet , the benefit inherent in a holder 's right to sue the carrier may well be worth the burden of having to pay unpaid freight . |
24 | Billy Rock who has Listowel in mind for his smart and successful chaser Joey Kelly runs the gelding on Monday and he will go again at the next Roscommon meeting a fortnight later before travelling to Listowel where he might be worth an investment in view of that Galway win in July . |
25 | It is therefore plausible that this pulsar should be detectable as a γ -ray source ; if its γ -ray luminosity is the same fraction of its total energy-loss rate as for the Vela pulsar , then it should be about a factor of 20 less bright than Vela . |
26 | Descartes believed firmly that universals were formed in the mind and that ideas possessed ‘ objective ’ and ‘ formal ’ reality ; that is , that it was an irreducible feature of ideas that they were able to be about a class of objects . |
27 | In practice , that would have to be about the level at which sterling was trading in the foreign exchange markets . |
28 | ‘ At least the French are doing their best to kill the whole stupid thing off for good , ’ the heroine remarks ; and when her lover solemnly tells her that modern fiction can only be about the difficulty of writing fiction , she asks why writers bother to put their names on title-pages . |
29 | I am hoping that ‘ Oh Brother ’ or ‘ Teach In ’ will be about the ribber in the not too distant future ! |
30 | Would , this would be about the turn of the century ? |