Example sentences of "revealed [prep] the [num ord] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 What I did get away with was arguably worse than murder , and revealed for the first time something of what I was letting myself in for by getting involved with Karen Parsons .
2 THE covert world of the SAS can today be revealed for the first time .
3 GRAHAM TAYLOR last night revealed for the first time what Paul Gascoigne 's return means to him .
4 Material collected in south-east Ecuador has revealed for the first time Triassic marine sediments with bivalves , as well as Jurassic microfloras and Cretaceous macrofaunas .
5 Her eye for the natural scene is revealed for the first time in her ‘ Alfoxden Journal ’ ( 1798 ) , the first fruit of the creative partnership between brother and sister which is celebrated at the climax of Wordsworth 's ‘ Tintern Abbey ’ .
6 The full cost of the 1986 Chernobyl disaster is revealed for the first time .
7 An S-A-S officer who led a mission to prevent the Gulf conflict spreading throughout the Middle East has revealed for the first time what happened behind enemy lines .
8 A depressing picture of a grey society is revealed for the first time in comparisons of the way people live across the UK .
9 The timings of the trains will be revealed for the first time and anyone interested is welcome to attend the meeting at St Mary 's Centre , Corporation Road , Middlesbrough at 7.30pm .
10 In the end the Lord Chief Justice , Lord Widgery , found for the publishers on the ground that , although confidentiality could be enforced in suitable cases , this was not a suitable case : the matters revealed in the first volume of the Diaries , being ten years old , were too stale to have any security aspect .
11 I can not divulge the ideas being discussed as they are wide ranging and could be of value to our rivals but hopefully more will be revealed in the next issue of Network .
12 Details of the science experiments which the astronaut will carry out may be revealed in the next week or two , Professor Heinz Wolff , of Brunel University , said .
13 Anderson 's analysis of Preston 's immigration patterns , as revealed by the mid-nineteenth century census returns , shows that 70 per cent of the population were born outside the town .
14 It articulates what is revealed by the sixth sense .
15 The migration component has to be based on estimates gauged from a variety of sources like the Electoral Register , the NHS Central Register , the International Passenger Survey , and the migration patterns revealed by the last census .
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