Example sentences of "of [art] [noun pl] [prep] [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 Cars being abandoned there because of the chances of them being er found .
2 Rebecca was sifting restlessly through some of the papers in her in tray , and he went over to her .
3 The President looked at one of the papers before him .
4 She kept reminding herself of the stories about him in the gossip columns , of his reputation as a womaniser .
5 If this is the face of your soul , then you are more evil than the worst of the stories about you . ’
6 But you know , Murtach , that in the past the Warbutt has waived a point when there is a majority of the lords against it . ’
7 One of the cops behind me on the stairs put an armlock on me .
8 I shall discuss some of the problems with you .
9 One of the problems with I twelve and the numerical content of I twelve is that it 's very difficult to differentiate between offices and services , it 's proved impossible to monitor .
10 There 's very little in there about competency , which is one of the problems with it .
11 I understand the point you 're making about er self regulation and er I think it 's brought a lot of the problems upon us and enabled the frauds to take place er and that 's what de-regulation and self regulation leads to .
12 But as regards going out to play we always had to take some of the others with us .
13 Marion said , glad of the security of the others around her and thus able to sound pretty sharp .
14 Note first , however , that categories being the invention of critics and books being the creation of writers , seldom will any of these sub-genres of crime fiction be without something of the others in it .
15 ‘ Have you seen this ? ’ he asked , putting a copy of The Times before them .
16 Merger with the Southampton based British Seafarers was not merely a convenience , but a necessity , and Wilson , writing in his journal The Seaman exulted that " Shinwell 's patched up old derelict has run bow against the rock of the Sailors ' and Firemen 's Union and ignominiously gone to the bottom " Later he gave his own version of how Shinwell had flattered the susceptible French into leaving to him the day-today business of the Glasgow branch and poisoned the minds of the members against him .
17 This will vary according to the feed you are using ; the type of swimfeeder ; the size and number of the perforations in it , and the type of swim where you are using it .
18 Education about the best use of the resources around them is probably the highest of the long-term priorities in such countries .
19 I 'd like to know more details of the circumstances of it , but one must always mourn the deaths of people whether they are innocent civilians , members of the security forces or paramilitaries , because it 's an indication that there 's a failure of the system in Northern Ireland .
20 We will return one of the schedules to you when the Account is opened so that you 've got a permanent record of your calculations .
21 And when El-Jorr sent the bill to them , they , too , refused to pay , claiming that most of the charges on it were unauthorized .
22 I went into the courtroom innocent of the charges against me , and I am still innocent , ’ he said .
23 Is that the sum total of the charges against me ?
24 Sociological study does not aim to discover who is innocent of the charges against them and who is guilty .
25 The convictions appeared to give new life to government efforts to combat corruption in the Chicago stock exchange following the failure in mid-1990 to secure convictions against three Swiss franc futures traders on most of the charges against them .
26 At the Easter vestry in 1818 Merceron was voted out , and shortly afterwards he was convicted of the charges against him and imprisoned for eighteen months .
27 He claimed that he had not acted illegally , nor authorized others to do so , but also stated that he believed Poindexter to be innocent of the charges against him .
28 ‘ We therefore conclude that there was de facto , albeit voidable contract , between the owners and Ballay ; that it was by virtue of that contract that Ballay took possession of the goods ; that accordingly the transfer of the goods to him was with the consent and express authority of the owner and that accordingly there was no lack of authorisation and no appropriation .
29 We therefore conclude that there was a de facto , albeit voidable contract , between the owners and Ballay ; that it was by virtue of that contract that Ballay took possession of the goods ; that accordingly the transfer of the goods to him was with the consent and express authority of the owner and that accordingly there was no lack of authorisation and no appropriation .
30 I 've seen a lot of the likes of you ,
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