Example sentences of "[conj] one [noun] of [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 This might lead her to change her expectation of the average level of prices ; after all , if she is rational she must know that unpredictable movements in aggregate demand can occur and that one symptom of them is that the price in her island is higher than she was expecting the average to be .
2 And , although one part of her found it deeply frustrating , at another level Folly was grateful for his restraint .
3 An addition to Rotterdam 's World Trade Center was built in 1986–87 and one part of it was set aside for a V.I.P. entertainment suite .
4 For the first dose , the bottle should be succussed 8–12 times , and one tablespoonful of it should be diluted with half a glass of water .
5 It 's a a a re a really nice restaurant but you can pick all your food raw and they just , there 's a chef cooking , and you just get one of these plates , you can have as many helpings as you want , they serve you a cold starter and a hot starter but there 's a buffet that 's about half the size of our club and one side of it it 's all fish on a wet fish slab , and steak , and veal , and chicken and so there 's every sort of meat you can think of , and you can pick a wooden platter full of it , so you go and give it the chef with this number that they give you and then they come serve you with whatever you want .
6 In particular this applied to women , and one indication of it is indeed the change over the post-war period in economic activity rates among women .
7 Sat them in for the whole of the break and one group of her , hers I think .
8 It will be evident that these united designs compete under considerable disadvantage with the single designs , and that unless a united design should be superior in both departments to all its single competitors , it could not receive a prize because one portion of it could hardly be executed without the other .
9 So that , while one part of me remained intimate with the cotton , another separate centre of cartoon existence accompanied those tokens which served , through their concatenation and order , to mirror parallel developments in the world of objects .
10 For Bickerton , the continuum — a dynamic system of lects — is necessary to explain the complexities of the Guyanese linguistic situation : " for Guyanese Creole clearly does not constitute a language , in so far as one end of it is indistinguishable from English " ( Bickerton 1973 : 166 ) .
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