Example sentences of "to [prep] [art] [num ord] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Whatever local radio you were listening to during the 3rd week of June , it is likely that you would have heard Delahunty 's editorial director , Paul Mace , on the hour , every hour , bringing you those live reports from the Pilkington Glass Ladies ' Championships at Eastbourne .
2 It would , of course , be unthinkable to actually put down in print what Rex and Laura got up to during the next hour .
3 The resulting copy , being at one remove from the original , is referred to as a second generation tape , and it will be slightly lower in quality than the original .
4 But above all their value to user education is that they act as focal points , so that if practitioners have a problem there is an information centre or clearinghouse to take it to as a first resort .
5 The notion of power referred to here is that which Lukes referred to as the second dimension of power ( see Ch. 2 ) .
6 This , incidentally , is officially referred to as the first launch of the programme although it was the second .
7 To overcome this problem , you should ALWAYS include a line similar to as the FIRST line of any error handling routine .
8 Those born in countries referred to as the Third World are much less likely to reach what would be considered to be old age .
9 A combination of District and Regional Council 's policies , industrial decline , and the embracing of popular capitalism pursued by central government since their election in 1979 , has ensured that the schemes in Glasgow have the highest levels of multiple deprivation of any other city in the UK and has created what is commonly referred to as the Fourth World .
10 Although amendments to the published general SVQ specifications will not be possible during the first year , we will be consulting on whether the specifications should be added to for the second year .
11 Oh yes , there were Well , all the erm boys from up to about the fifth form , in the old pupil-teachers training centre went , er was formed by joining that and school , they took boys from there .
12 okay , round the base of your thumb , basically what we want to do is we want to clamp these fingers in so they ca n't come un unstuck , we want to push them together because she ca n't keep them shut like that , but the next thing is that you come round to the back where the little finger is , the next time you come round here , you 're gon na come round to about the first thumb joint okay and then you 're gon na go over the top okay and if you come round again the little thumb , by , by the little finger , you come round again to the thumb joint okay , come over the top again , round , we 're just making really like the figure of eight , but all the time we 're keeping off of this wrist here and I 'm keeping her fingers in , are you alright still ?
13 And erm we erm when you got to about the third class I think you you was allowed to participate int he woodwork and metal er class , you used to go across for half a day a week .
14 No , she bloody ought to after the first couple of dozen times , but anyway , when they come back and we got back at night and we started playing them and putting things on er you know they got to like it
15 The Northern Line was begun in 1890 but added to throughout the twentieth century until 1941 .
16 This system was adhered to throughout the seventeenth century .
17 she does n't spell her name like that and I 'll speak to within the next couple of working days
18 I 'm going back now to before the First World War , sometime in the early years of this century .
19 And we really have to in the first instance , get public opinion to realise the way in which our lives are so pervasively subject to criminal prosecution , that 's the first step .
20 Explain , with specific examples if possible , how the other factors referred to in the first paragraph ( such as changes in what the law counts as crime , fluctuations in the vigour of the application of the law ) determine or influence the criminal statistics .
21 But how do you know who to talk to in the first place ?
22 And erm I ca I came to in the first place because it was the best teaching hospital in the Midlands at that time .
23 ‘ I did n't steal anything from you , and what you lost , you had no right to in the first place . ’
24 you 're not too sure what he wants , he 's agreed to see you next week , he does n't know why he 's seeing you but you go back and you present , so try and overcome rejection but the thing was he wants to in the first place .
25 Before we talk about the er er getting to the purpose of our meeting , erm , how long were you , how did you come to in the first place ?
26 erm is not talking to in the first place
27 These are all the potential problems we are exposed to in the twentieth century .
28 The Landlord demises to the Tenant the Premises Together with the rights specified in the second Schedule but Excepting and reserving to the Landlord the rights specified in the third Schedule To hold the Premises to the Tenant for the Contractual Term Subject to all rights easements privileges restrictions covenants and stipulations of whatever nature affecting the Premises [ including the matters contained or referred to in the seventh Schedule ] Yielding and paying to the Landlord :
29 The difficulty here lies in what " this " refers to in the second sentence .
30 In the case of unregistered title the husband 's solicitors will , therefore , submit a copy of the last conveyance , mortgage ( if any ) , any sales-off or other transactions , together with copies of any covenants referred to in the last conveyance , to the new husband 's solicitors who will themselves submit a draft conveyance .
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