Example sentences of "[be] [verb] [adv] [prep] [art] second " in BNC.
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1 | The shop had been going since before the Second World War . |
2 | There was also the sensitive question of returning land to ethnic Germans and Hungarians , whose land had been expropriated immediately after the Second World War as punishment for their alleged collaboration with the Nazi occupiers . |
3 | That is , in spite of revising their reservation wages upwards , they are exiting faster in the second period than in the first period . |
4 | ( ii ) Second reading In his discussions with the Leader of the House relating to the Bill , the Minister will have arranged for certain times ( usually a day or two , but perhaps up to eight days ) to have been set aside for the second reading debate . |
5 | The basic examination should consist of : ( a ) an interview with frequent switching from language to language ; ( b ) an improvised short speech in the first language on a topic chosen at random , to assess general knowledge ; ( c ) non-technical information in one language to be rendered consecutively in a second language ; ( d ) translation from a text off-the-cuff . |
6 | MAKESHIFT court proceedings in the home of a dying lung-cancer victim , Alfred McTear , had to be abandoned halfway through the second day yesterday on doctor 's advice . |
7 | In the early 19th century , however , new legislation inadvertently deprived the press of its fiscal advantages , and its publishing petered out , to be revived only after the Second World War . |
8 | Certain ‘ representatives of the Afghan people ’ would be admitted only at the second stage of the conference and they would need to accept the decisions of the conference . |
9 | Disc jockeys added a ‘ voice ’ to formerly instrumental discs which would then be recorded again for the second version of the same record . |
10 | Proposals for a maximum carcase weight of 380kg , which was more than likely to be introduced this July , could mean heavier animals having to be marketed earlier before the second qualifying period . |
11 | The average size of the sentenced prison population has been increasing steadily since the Second World War . |
12 | The parallels here are with Sheffield before huge new steel works were erected there during the second half of the nineteenth century . |
13 | The sections were evaluated blindly by the second author twice with two months interval . |
14 | All of the practices were looking forward to the second year in which the ‘ steady state ’ of year 1 would give way to even greater freedom and opportunity . |
15 | Australian team manager Bobby Simpson said his bowlers were looking forward to the second day , when similar overcast conditions were forecast . |
16 | Soon Paige could hear it too — there were people climbing up towards them and they were getting closer by the second . |
17 | At halftime , he 'd come on to the pitch and give the whole team extra-strong mints , rearrange the tactics , change our positions , tell us we were playing downhill in the second half , tell us that a six-goal deficit was nothing . |
18 | But they were disappearing even before the Second World War . |
19 | It is believed to have been composed early in the second century , very likely by an individual who was indeed named Jude and who , together with his brother James , presided over the Nazarean party at the time . |
20 | In any case , it 's tucked away in the second half of the book , after Offred 's prison-like existence has been thoroughly , horribly established . |
21 | Plus , of course , there 's Emma 's violin which will always draw folk-rock comparisons , even though it is employed more as a second guitar or lead keyboard . |
22 | This restriction does not lose us any power , however , because every occam program can be identified with the set of its finite syntactic approximations ( a term which is defined precisely in the second section ) . |
23 | Furthermore , the expression of HBsAg in liver was essentially identical to that of pre-S2 but not that of pre-S1 , in keeping with the suggestion that transcription of mRNAs for HBsAg and pre-S2 is controlled by the same promotor , and that for pre-S1 is controlled independently by a second promotor . |
24 | He was booked early in the second half for a clattering foul on Abel . |
25 | A family which was torn apart during the Second World War has had an emotional reunion . |
26 | When I left you last month I was looking forward to the second round of the Macpherson Paints UK Championships to be fished at Diglis Weir on the River Severn . |
27 | The New Town , the central part of which was built mainly in the second half of the eighteenth century , is more spaciously laid out in classical streets and squares — ‘ not only gay and airy ’ , said Robert Louis Stevenson , ‘ but highly picturesque ’ . |
28 | It was used extensively during the Second World War , and is still used in parts of the Third World to help eradicate malaria and typhus . |
29 | Prednisone was used less during the second year ; twenty six patients received one course and 10 children two or more courses . |
30 | The barking was getting closer by the second and we could hear the hunters whistling and shouting orders to the dogs , and the sound of the boar scrunching dried leaves and snapping dead branches as it hurtled down through the trees . |