Example sentences of "[noun sg] [adv] [prep] [art] days " in BNC.

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1 You have hurt me a lot in the past three days , Bob , and I think you will hurt me a great deal more in the days to come .
2 For fragrance , in my opinion , there is little to match juniper ; I would stack this wood aside against the days I had visitors .
3 A Aequidens rivulatus got its common name back in the days when medium-sized fish were few and far between and by the standards then it was a Terror of an aquarium fish .
4 Providing a nostalgic look back to the days of World War One were the Great War Combat Team , who were ideally suited to this venue , flying three SE.5a replicas , Fokker D.VII G-BBFPL , Fokker Triplane N152JS along with Robin Bowes ‘ guesting ’ in Fokker Triplane G-ATJM , the latter failing to sell at the Onslow 's Auction that was held at Rendcomb on the same day ( see page 30 ) .
5 He had been a pupil back in the days of Gurney and Hamilton , and in 1867 had won the Prizes in Greek , Latin , English , and Mathematics .
6 Birth of a Baby Back to the days of nurses and nurseries
7 It is a curious turn around from the days when bondholders pleased to be bought out and were driving to drawing lots !
8 I have experience of this class of case over a period of more than fifty years and it has n't been uncommon in the past even in the days when judges took a more rigorous view than they cline er inclined to do nowadays not to punish er in any with a custodial
9 Footage of Viscounts , Dakotas , Convairs , Stratocruisers , Constellations and DC-7s abound in this interesting film which takes the viewer back to the days of piston-engined airliner flying .
10 It was an unhappy start to what proved to be a contentious relationship , with Lugard wanting to turn the clock back to the days of his undisputed pre-eminence , and Temple , whose sense of his own consequence was equally developed , treating him as primus ( barely ) inter pares .
11 Was n't this turning the clock back to the days of the old non-advanced courses ?
12 Coal was on the move when Leith was first recognised as a port back in the days of Robert the Bruce .
13 The book concentrates on the good old days of airliners , flying Dakotas over the Himalayas , rope starting the Dak when all else had failed , Avro Yorks on the Rangoon-Singapore route , an undercarriage collapse on an Ambassador at Southend , transporting horses in a Bristol Freighter ( known to all as the Frightener ) , and tales like these fill the pages taking the reader back to the days when flying was still an adventure .
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