Example sentences of "bring [pers pn] [prep] the [num ord] " in BNC.

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1 My time at the Housing Corporation was eventful in bringing me for the first , but no means last , time into contact with Mrs Thatcher when , on the fall of the Heath government , she became the shadow Minister of the Environment , in succession to the job she had had as Minister of Education .
2 Bring them to the next lesson .
3 Erm you you bring me onto the second dimension of Leeds ' objection which is to do with the distribution of those jobs .
4 He explained about the legend and the Monument and the meteorite that had brought it in the first place .
5 Three more hours of paddling and bailing , bailing and paddling , brought them to the second expected rendezvous , but in the great troughs and high seas the submarine lookouts could miss the torch signal or RG beam from a 16-foot ( 5m ) canoe .
6 This therefore brings me to the second reason why democracy is bound up with a measure of economic and social equality .
7 But my argument will be double-edged ; and this brings me to the second reason for discounting ‘ higher learning ’ as a chapter title .
8 That brings me to the second most surprising feature of the fossil record .
9 That brings me to the second issue that I wish to discuss — the question of anonymity , which the Secretary of State mentioned several times in his opening speech .
10 This brings me to the second part of this paper in which I wish to turn to some of the ‘ challenges ’ a UK government archivist faces in attempting to implement an archival records management programme in government .
11 That cultural regulation , as we have seen , is controlled by men , for ( and this brings me to the third point ) , within this scheme of thought , woman herself is placed more fully within the realm of nature than man in consequence of the fact that more of her time and her body are seen to be taken up with the natural processes surrounding reproduction of the species .
12 This brings me to the third general quality of successful replicators : copying-fidelity .
13 That brings me to the next area of concern .
14 A pleasant 15-minute walk brings you to the first two faces , which contain dozens of routes at VS to E1 .
15 And manager Ian Porterfield must decide how quickly to bring him into the first team , though it will be tough to drop Kevin Hitchcock .
16 But it is a deeply conservative trade which has resolutely resisted most attempts to bring it into the twentieth century , to make it more efficient , or to make access to the law more available to the ordinary citizen .
17 He wanted to bring us into the twenty-first century .
18 Here our itinerary takes us along the new section of the road , rather surprisingly signposted to Fort William , and brings us to the first railway so far seen , at Strathcarron Station .
19 This brings us to the second proposition , which was evidently begotten of inability to answer that difficult , because inherently unanswerable , question .
20 This brings us to the second stimulus to the citizenship idea .
21 This brings us to the second of my three questions .
22 This brings us to the second general point : that women were not working in what were known as " skilled " occupations .
23 Nor was the scene confined to the city : half the picture was outside the wall , a stretch of which was shown near the middle ; and this brings us to the second great change , the opening up of space .
24 However , this line of argument still leaves unanswered the question why strikes are presented as they are , which brings us to the second of the points Hyman raised .
25 This brings us to the last perspective which has influenced us : the study , in the broadest sense , of personality .
26 This brings us to the Third Period , which started with the very first human emotions which heralded the dawn of civilisation .
27 This brings us to the third , and for our purposes the most significant , of the problems laid out at the start of this section .
28 This brings us to the third stage : the arrival of a new and sometimes troublesome predator in the British countryside .
29 This brings us to the third question : is regulation worthwhile ?
30 This brings us to the third phase , in which linguists have become more generally prepared to question the notion of linguistic equality and to accept that language differences might give rise to difficulties which are not due solely to the social and linguistic misconceptions of teachers .
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