Example sentences of "there 's [adv] an " in BNC.

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1 There 's over an hour before the meeting is due to start .
2 There 's also an exhibition and 20s-style Picture Palace at Armley Mills on the early history of the movies because it was at nearby Leeds Bridge , in 1888 , that the first moving images were made .
3 There 's also an a la carte restaurant , a residents ' dining room and a TV lounge .
4 There 's also an autotimer , a temperature hold that keeps food hot at the end of cooking and a food probe that cooks food exactly how you want it , without timing worries .
5 There 's also an odd assortment of drums and stringed instruments — a couple of electric guitars , a bass , a mandolin — lying about .
6 Most of the tank is served by an undergravel system but there 's also an external power filter , in the shape of a Fluval 403 , which is filled with ceramic rings and carbon .
7 There 's also an enhancing tool which lets you embellish the charts and you can even paste bitmapped images ( such as a picture of your favourite car ) onto parts of the graphs .
8 There 's also an option to practise serving : a tricky task involving quickly guiding a small cross into the service box .
9 There 's also an adventure playground , a toddlers play area and an unusual maze where you can test your own ecological skills .
10 And there 's also an equinox programme on Channel Four about bottled water .
11 But er , there 's also an advantage of passing and receiving areas as there is before .
12 And there 's also an official ( though not compulsory ) form of application to withdraw notice of deposit of which a supply could be kept in your office — Form 86 .
13 There 's also an Olmympic place for sprinter Stephanie Douglas from Milton Keynes … she 'll be running in the 100 metres …
14 There 's also an Olmympic place for sprinter Stephanie Douglas from Milton Keynes … she 'll be running in the 100 metres …
15 There 's just an immense amount of work to be done , ’ he said .
16 I mean if you speak three different languages you could use three different words to put the same sort of thought of a picture dog , chien , hound there 's probably an Italian and a and that but if you speak the languages then different words different codes if you like are for the same idea .
17 Read the book it will tell you there 's probably an explanation on the cover or the inside of the cover pass me the coffee please .
18 Er when there 's already an abusive sort of dynamic going on erm y'know other people who are more similar in age can can can get can start participating in that .
19 Oh that 's sunken there in n it , yeah do n't think there 's yet an empty seat
20 There 's always an ever-changing scenery in front of you and people .
21 There 's always an argument between your own manufacturing company and the retailing side .
22 There 's always an immediate response : ‘ Well , that 's it then .
23 There 's always an expectation that someone who runs a nightclub lives in a nightclub .
24 by the veins , there 's always an exception to every rule and the exception to that rule in the case of the heart and the lung connection is the pulmonary artery and the pulmonary vein , you may not get asked anything about this , but just in case you do it 's as well to know , in that instance the flow is reversed , in other words the pulmonary vein takes blood away from the heart and up to the lungs , and the pulmonary artery brings the oxygenated blood back down to the heart from the lungs , if you want to have a look at the diagrams for that and look at it yourself later on , there 's no need for you to get concerned or confused about this at all , there 's no need .
25 There 's always an endless wait for the lifts , ’ she said , so they used the fire stairs .
26 There 's always an alternative .
27 So I 'm not a for a moment suggesting that some rules and regulations are n't needed and I think that er the trouble is that every rule and regulation that is passed in this house , there 's always an excuse for it and there 's usually a very good reason for it , but that is the problem that the government faces and it 's quite fairly er a problem the treasury face when they introduce these statutory instruments because er no one can disagree that fraud must be stamped out , all I 'm actually saying is that unfortunately upstairs we have a deregulation bill going ahead at all pace with hundreds of clauses and hundreds of new rules to try and red hundreds of new clauses to reduce the number of rules and here we are downstairs on the floor we have passing for very good reason perhaps , more rules and regulations and there are four more tonight and I believe that every government department Madam deputy speaker , has a minister specially appointed to keep an eye on deregulation and I just wondered although er my honourable friend on the front bench mentioned that er the even the D T I minister responsible for deregulation has looked at these , I wonder if there is a minister in the treasury , they 've actually put a minister in the treasury responsible for deregulation or is the ministry actually above deregulation because I think that er I got the impression that the that every ministry would have a deregulation minister and I think it would be rather useful to know who the deregulation minister is in the treasury .
28 The exception , because there 's always an exception to every rule .
29 erm There 's always an ambivalence in the relationship between governors and schools in that , in order to have a good relationship with a head , you need to be on friendly terms with him so that the head , or her , so that the head will communicate with the governors .
30 I mean I know there 's always an argument , especially here in Oxford , that people just come , look round the colleges and they 're gone again , but having said that some of them must spend some money .
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