Example sentences of "once again a " in BNC.

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1 ‘ It took us quite a while to persuade other people just how much tennis in general could benefit , especially in those countries where Government grants are dependent on Olympic membership , if tennis was once again a member of the Olympic family .
2 Today , with projects as large as Canary Wharf , Broadgate and King 's Cross , the developer is once again a town planner .
3 The falcon still wheels in silence high in the cooling air above the statue of Sir John Moore , the spotlights flick on around the camp perimeter and once again a security patrol prepares to leave the gate .
4 It is once again a matter of setting the patient an achievable and sustainable objective .
5 Once again a Scottish keeper was cast in the role of the disastrous fool .
6 Once again a distinction must be made between an ‘ odorant ’ defined earlier as ‘ any chemical compound which stimulates the olfactory sense ’ and an ‘ odour ’ being a sensation of smell .
7 The US is once again a case in point , but the situation also arises in the majority of the decolonised third-world states .
8 In this decade I 'm once again a junior . ’
9 The system will then reverse its motion and begin to contract , becoming once again a great ball of fire , and another ‘ big bang ’ will eventually trigger a new creative era .
10 Once again a widow was to outlive her husband — how very different from the experience of those 18th-century Titford wives , worn out after years of child-bearing and dying in their fifties if not before !
11 Once again a representative of the Post Office demanded guard wires and in subsequent correspondence , the Board of Trade enquired which was Elis David Road and which was Lower Church Street , as they were too small to show clearly on the map .
12 Once again a Leading Man of the charming but self-effacing school , Redford plays maverick computer whizz Martin Bishop , brimming with anti-authority attitude and a secret past , who runs an ad hoc surveillance team full of grumbling , eccentric geniuses for hire .
13 Once again a joy to watch 8
14 Don Mini walked over to it and once again a curious twittery conversation took place , a much longer one this time , with Don Mini doing nearly all the twittering and the swan nodding and nodding .
15 Amnesty International believes that Abie Nathan is once again a prisoner of conscience .
16 Saturday morning , and once again a fair and breezy day , so fair that I decided to give myself a holiday from writing , and go straight after breakfast to pick up the supplies I would need for the weekend .
17 That has now changed Eastern arts no longer support the gallery now one obvious reason for that is the gallery started so well because of the enthusiasm from a number of professional people who came along and gave their advice and much of their time and such a body of people has not been called upon for a number of years now and once again a request to discuss this with Mr was refused .
18 Once again a single victory had given the English king the illusion of conquest in Scotland , but , like his grandfather Edward I , he was soon to discover how little support there really was in Scotland for his settlement .
19 It is sometimes argued that the rise of institutional investment and the decline of individual direct investment in large public companies means that the traditional model of the shareholder controlling the directors of the company is once again a realistic one .
20 Once again a similar argument exists in administrative law-namely that the function of judicial review is to ensure that public bodies only take decisions which are within the scope of their expertise .
21 When Liverpool City Council abolished the title of lord mayor in 1983 there was a ‘ public outcry ’ ( The Times 18.5.83 ) , thus demonstrating once again a point made 100 years earlier in 1888 : ‘ that a sentimental grievance is by no means the least difficult to overcome ’ when considering changes in local government ( quoted in Hampton 1966:463 ) .
22 And Britain is once again a country that has found its pride , regained a high reputation in the world and is playing a leading role on the international stage — both in Europe and beyond .
23 ‘ Britain is once again a country that has found its pride , regained a high reputation in the world and is playing a leading role on the international stage — both in Europe and beyond . ’
24 Once again a universalist rhetoric disguises a rather more restricted reality .
25 In fact it was not finally completed within English until the post-war period , with Bateson once again a prominent influence .
26 This led to an improvement in trade and a fall in inflation , so that Germany in the late 1980s became once again a country of trade surpluses and a strong currency , at the cost of some social division .
27 We might think that by the end of this fragment there is once again a single version for both speakers of ‘ what I think we 're talking about ’ .
28 The problem for competition policy is once again a trade-off .
29 Unfortunately , apart from a full-size Space bar the keyboard is once again a real key copy of the original .
30 Again I found myself in bed in a singsong house , and once again a strange girl was lying there beside me .
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