Example sentences of "from the [num ord] [noun] to " in BNC.

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1 On the timber side , an enormous selection of old doors ranging from the 17th century to Art Deco is available .
2 In decreasing order of magnitude of infant mortality , the curve shifts through a nearly " U " shape ( Arab World ) to a " J " shape ( Africa and the East & South-East Asia & Oceania regions ) , and the minimum drops from the 4th-6th order to the 2nd-3rd order births , as in Africa .
3 All claims arising whilst the craft is left afloat unmanned in the water from the 1st September to 31st March inclusive , whilst in the United Kingdom , Republic of Ireland and Channel Islands .
4 The financial year shall run from the 1st January to the 31st December .
5 The work carried out shows the area was occupied from the 1st century to the 4th century .
6 Nor did they plan portfolios of prints , as Die Brücke did ; a practice , by the way , followed by a variety of artists ' organisations including the Senefelder Group in England , which has sold its members ' lithographs from the nineteenth century to the present day .
7 In the transition from the nineteenth century to the twentieth century , clitoridectomy , it appears , ceased to be acceptable .
8 Even the RP ‘ broad ’ [ a ] ( as in path , dance ) seems to have acquired its high evaluation only recently : Mugglestone ( 1989 ) cites evidence from the nineteenth century to the effect that it was stigmatized as a vulgarism by some commentators : it looks as though it may have been ‘ borrowed ’ from a low-status dialect ( such as ‘ Cockney ’ ) .
9 In whatever fashion the contrast is formulated ( we might say , for example , that the two revolutions — political and industrial — which had inspired the new political science began to move in different directions , towards greater equality in one case , away from it in the other ) it embodies a large part of the substance of political enquiry and of political doctrines from the nineteenth century to the present time .
10 chart the migration history from the Indian subcontinent to Scotland from the nineteenth century to the present day ;
11 London The Corporation of London office holds the official archives from the eleventh century to the present , and many documents are of wide interest , for they deal with jurisdiction and property interests in many countries , including the estates granted in 1628 for sale by the Crown to settle national debts .
12 The mast or stave churches of Norway are now unique in Europe and were built during the whole of the Middle Ages from the eleventh century to the Reformation , after which timber churches based on the Eastern European pattern were more usual .
13 Thus violence was sustained at a high level by American capitals ‘ first great offensive against labor ’ from the late-nineteenth century to the 1920s .
14 The Museum is open daily from 2 – 5 p.m. ( except Mondays ) from the 28th March to 1st November , Sunday and Monday of Bank Holiday weekends 11 a.m. — 5 p.m .
15 There are several other possible explanations but they are all of an uncertain nature , so the study will not be pursued in these pages , Instead , a name from the author 's conjugate family will be used , because its origin and development can be traced , quite unambiguously , from the thirteenth century to the twentieth .
16 The first display runs until 18 April at the sixteenth-century Oratorio di San Rocco and includes medieval ceramics from the thirteenth century to the middle of the fifteenth .
17 The buildings of the Garden of England are extensively surveyed in Anthony Quiney 's English Domestic Architecture : Kent Houses ( £35 ) , a fully illustrated survey of the county 's buildings from the thirteenth century to the present .
18 Judicial decisions gradually shifted vicarages from the second category to the first ; before the end of Edward 's reign , royal judges had deemed more than a score of advowsons of perpetual vicarages to be lay fee .
19 Short was a child prodigy and the outstanding product of the English chess explosion of the 70s and early 80s which took English chess from the second division to second place only to the former Soviet Union .
20 Can he pilot Blackburn Rovers straight from the Second Division to the championship as Clough did with Forest ?
21 By catching the Chamden-London Inter-City train it is possible to go from the Second Division to the Third and back again on this unequalled trip .
22 PROMOTION for Middlesbrough Football Club from the Second Division to the new Premier League could prove costly .
23 In 1515 , we find a cow being left to provide a light before the rood to burn from the second peal to matins , and till high mass is done and from the second peal to evensong till evensong be done for ever more .
24 When Engles therefore tries to explain the passage from the second stage to the gens stage he has no theoretical tools to deal with this , and he lamely has to echo Morgan and to explain the passage in Darwinian terms dealing with natural selection .
25 What remains the same is Rickenbacker 's liking for parallel neck depth , and this one measures more or less ″ from the first fret to the 17th .
26 ‘ Graham led from the first lap to the 97th at Monaco , and then ran out of oil .
27 In February 1990 , by which time he had moved to become manager of West Ham , Macari became embroiled in financial scandals dating back to his years at Swindon and eventually ended in the newly promoted club being relegated from the First Division to the Third , a draconian punishment which was partially decreased on appeal .
28 Throughout the whole sequence , from the first musings to the final decision , he has been reacting spontaneously to what step by step he has been learning .
29 Characters have been copied from the first field to the second , until a word mark ( here in the source field ) is encountered .
30 On 3 March 1987 the originating summons was amended by adding the seventh and eighth plaintiffs , and on 19 March 1987 it was further amended to seek accounts of all transactions entered into , and of all dealings with the property of the plaintiffs by the first defendant , and of all moneys received by or payment made by the first defendant or by the second or third defendants , and an inquiry whether any sums were due from the first defendant to the plaintiffs .
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