Example sentences of "in [prep] [art] [num ord] [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | The florist was closed , and they 'd put the fresh stock away , so that when Boy looked in through the first window the flowers he saw were of silk ; all artificial , but so good that they were better and fresher than the real thing , and certainly more expensive . |
2 | Now , in a mood of heady exhilaration , a delicious scenario flashed in his mind ; the school drop-out , on his way to take delivery of his own Jumbo Jet , literally dropping back in during a First XI cricket match with two of the most celebrated test cricketers in the world in tow . |
3 | In contrast , at times Durie looked ready to scream , especially when the errors started creeping in during the second set of her 6-2 , 7-6 win over the promising Yayuk Basuki . |
4 | Almost 2,000 knives and other blades have been handed in during the first fortnight of the month-long amnesty . |
5 | The police moved in during the first half and then at half-time as a mob of Englishmen taunted and threatened Spanish fans in Santander . |
6 | Deane was playing well out of position acting as a left wing , to such an extent that he got a few crosses in during the first half . |
7 | I expect further applications to come in during the next year and , with time , a growing number of applications as the benefits are seen to come through . |
8 | It is often unwise of the plaintiff to rely on the defendant sued obtaining an indemnity from a third party if the plaintiff could bring the third party in as a second defendant , eg in road accident cases . |
9 | They would only have had you in as a last resort . ’ |
10 | DUP MP Peter Robinson said selective internment should only be brought in as a last resort . |
11 | It is hard to disappoint someone who may have come in as a last port of call when all other channels to sort out their problems seem closed . |
12 | Bill Clinton swept in as the 42nd president of the United States with a landslide victory and the promise of a new beginning . |
13 | However , with Colin Dick still on his way home from Australia , Bell fills in as the last man in defence with Alan Simpson and Michael Rainey in the centre . |
14 | On every channel earnest-looking men with maps and pointers , looking like war-gamers in some fiendish Pentagon basement , demonstrate — predict , even — the inch-by-inch path that the storm is taking , noting that it usually passes off to the north , but may perhaps curve back upon itself and go in for a second strike . |
15 | Lio ! rt came in for a second run , but slower this time to allow for the big man 's unexpected agility . |
16 | She said politely , ‘ Would you like to come in for a last drink ? ’ |
17 | The Congress ( I ) Chief Minister , Pratap Singh Rane , who had been acting in a caretaker capacity after the legislative elections , was sworn in for a third term as Chief Minister . |
18 | After getting some oxygen , he then went back in for a third time . |
19 | Jyoti Basu was sworn in for a fourth term as Chief Minister on June 29 at the head of a CPI(M)-led government . |
20 | Congress ( I ) retained control of the State Assembly in Arunachal Pradesh in elections held in February 1990 , and Agong Apang was sworn in for a fourth term as Chief Minister in March [ see pp. 37245 ] . |
21 | The CPI(M) was returned to power in State Assembly elections held in May 1991 ; Jyoti Basu was sworn in for a fourth term as Chief Minister in June [ see p. 38287 ] . |
22 | President Hafez al-Assad was sworn in for a fourth term in office on March 12 . |
23 | As there was only the one company it is reasonable to infer that everyone roped in for the first loan was in fact a Merchant Taylor . |
24 | ‘ Greed came in for the first time . |
25 | Brian Cox , who runs the operation , says : ‘ Anyone coming in for the first time is going to start by taking on what 's already there . |
26 | But you can get it in For the first time at any age . |
27 | Eventually , on Feb. 23 , a non-Congress ( I ) government was sworn in for the first time in 10 years . |
28 | ‘ I said if we did n't win this time we 'd abolish the b + + + + + + , ’ says Dixon , digging in for the first time since his Army days . |
29 | The research by Yorkshire TV paid off last Sunday when 18 million tuned in for the first episode of A Touch of Frost . |
30 | Those worth £5 — £19 were roped in for the second loan , in 1523 , so paying a total of 15 per cent , not so very much less than what was expected of the £20 men , and of course a proportionately heavier burden . |