Example sentences of "one [coord] [art] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 On balance , studies have found no indication of harmful physical effects ; no evidence that television introduces a harmful amount of aggression , violence or fear into an already normal child or that it turns an undisturbed child into a disturbed one or a non-delinquent child into a delinquent .
2 The idea is not to replace an active form with an active one and a passive form with a passive one ; it is always the function of a category rather than the form it takes that is of paramount importance in translation .
3 I like to have some sort of colour down as an underpainting first to kill the white of the paper — a similar process to an oil painter , and I start by wetting the paper with an old one and a half inch household painting brush and then quickly slash in some colour which slightly relates to what I see .
4 Gluing is not so much a skilled job as a responsible one and a large number of mistakes are available to a determined man , all of which can have dangerous results .
5 The process of counting is a proficient one and a sufficient number of results are usually announced within a few hours of the close of the polls to know which party has won the election .
6 Yes if you can just do that front page which is the easiest one and the second page .
7 The others have it too : the thin one and the other woman are experiencing a desire , a sensual thrill , and the big man is full of wild rage .
8 The pattern of the Sunday School preceding the church is a common one and the rapid growth of this School from small beginnings , together with the increasing numbers of the Thomas Street Society , led to the providing of a wooden building , called the Tabernacle , somewhere near the present Eden Avenue in 1869 .
9 The full draw for Round One and the Preliminary Round is as follows : PRELIMINARY ROUND ( matches to be played by May 16 ) St Cuthbert 's High School , Newcastle v Ryton Comprehensive .
10 There is literally no social arena — from the strongest material relationship to the most subtle moral one — in which the possessing classes and a self-conscious proletariat could take one and the same position and figure as an undifferentiated whole .
11 There are good reasons for distinguishing it both from the level of the meanings of expressions , as will become apparent later in the text ( see in particular Chapter 6 ) , and from whatever more general non-linguistic level of mental activity has to take responsibility for human perception of external phenomena ; a sufficient reason is that speakers of the language are well aware that they can seek to identify one and the same entity or property by using the meanings of various different expressions : Examples like ( 22 ) are familiarly put forward as showing the distinction between meaning and reference ; they may serve that purpose but that is quite a different matter .
12 The reasonable conclusion is that one and the same thing is ‘ called a sensation when considered merely in itself , and a quality when looked at in relation to any one of the numerous objects , the presence of which to our organs excites in our minds that among various other sensations or feelings .
13 The Katt reckons OS/2 and Pink are fated to become one and the same thing .
14 In a recent article , William Taylor ( 1980 ) argues that professional development and personal development are not distinguishable processes but one and the same thing .
15 ( 2 ) The denial that there is some one and the same quality of pleasantness and another of painfulness which mark all those experiences which it is desirable to promote or prevent is a more forceful objection to Benthamite utilitarianism .
16 ‘ The more I saw of … the doings of an official generation slightly older than my own ’ , he writes , ‘ the more it was borne in upon me that the genuine image of the diplomatic process is hardly to be recaptured in historical narrative unless the lens through which it is viewed is a sharp one and the human texture of which it consists becomes visible in considerable detail . ’
17 Referee Paul Hewitt had no trouble refereeing this one and the big smile on coach Robin Bethel 's face said it all .
18 The 40-lb ( 18-kg ) suit consisted of two layers , a fitted black latex inner one and an outer armour of some 15 pieces in hard polyurethane with aluminium joins , plus a fibreglass helmet .
19 The response of the CNAA officer who visited Brighton was ‘ frankly incredulous … the position in Brighton is a difficult one and an unpromising basis for the launching of a new polytechnic ’ .
20 No one but a bloody fool would try to walk a mile with an arrow through his chest .
21 The preliminary round was an experience in more ways than one but a successful result in this tie could see the Blues avoiding such a scenario in future .
22 Miller 's End was empty , and no one but a stray farm-worker was going to use the lane .
23 Their political campaign had been as ineffectual as their terrorist ‘ outrages , ’ which had harmed no one but the odd insurance firm .
24 Is it clear that the parties intended that no one but the actual party in the contract should have the benefit of the contract or the right to call for its performance ?
25 Clearly the task of separating out these different strands of historical change is an enormous one but the mere outlining of these problems reminds us that the sociologist must always be sensitive to the differential cultural and historical experiences often hidden under such general and abstract labels as ‘ industrialization ’ , ‘ migration ’ , ‘ urbanization ’ , ‘ capitalism ’ and so on .
26 No one but the officiating priest was allowed to approach this most sacred place .
27 Since 1492 , when they were evicted from Spain , Tangier Jews had been a people without a country , owing allegiance to no one but the Jewish nation .
28 In this type of case the duty which mandamus enforces is often not a statutory one but the common law duty , which every power-holder has , to give proper consideration to the question of whether or not to exercise the power .
29 No one but an old Londoner who has been born and bred and has lived for 50 to 60 years in London can have any idea of the extent of the change .
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