Example sentences of "be [prep] a [noun sg] [art] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | He was a huge man in his early thirties who had been for a time a heavyweight boxer . |
2 | The more children there are in a family the less likely it is that the younger child will have eating difficulties . |
3 | BORINGLY familiar it may be as a measure the rise in the price of cigarettes in the latest budget gives me open , honest pleasure , though its smallness causes me disappointment . |
4 | I 'm like a headmistress a lot of the time . |
5 | And that general report would be in a sense a summate report or a form tutor report or a er , pupil management report , whatever title |
6 | Any culture , because it has to retain traditional customs and beliefs , has to be in a sense a conservative institution . |
7 | And he felt that it would be in a sense a miracle to produce a detailed adaptation to a particular way of life , a kind of adaptation to being fertilized by bees that you see in an orchid , by a single a large jump . |
8 | If competence and complexity are increasing correlatively , tomorrow 's user will be in a sense no better off than his present day counterpart . |
9 | Well that 's the best thing , cos I 'm on a case a couple of weeks and I rang your police on Friday night |
10 | You will not be at a level a good deal lower than the surrounding ground , so you will have to lay a hardcore base to build up the foundations to suit the path material and method of laying . |
11 | If the books are on a spinner the front book is mercilessly bent forward to see the books behind . |
12 | For example , in the following sentence : Since the last time we met when we had that huge dinner Ive been on a diet the first two tone-units present information which is relevant to what the speaker is saying , but which is not something new and unknown to the listener . |
13 | Day 14 ) Not only has Dave been on a raft the last week but today — honest Dave , I 've waited two months for that 50 bucks you promised me not to reveal this , but it has not arrived — he got off the raft and walked around Upset . |
14 | I remember him being in a pub a while back and a woman saying to him , What 's your wife going to do ? |
15 | For the keys — often made of thick grey iron , sometimes with decorated handles — were in a sense a promise of return , a promise that history inevitably broke . |
16 | The riots were in a sense a foretaste of the Gordon Riots of the summer of 1780 . |
17 | This was a consequence of the blurring of the two affinities in the early 1460s when Warwick was a loyal servant of the crown and when his men were in a sense the king 's men at one remove , a relationship formalized in some cases by entry into the royal household . |
18 | Stalnaker , 1975 ) Or , to interpret the idea in a way less ontologically extravagant , a way which does not seem to commit us to a plurality of somehow existing worlds , what the conditional means is this : if our actual world were different in that it were raining , and differences overall were in a sense the smallest possible , the balcony would be wet . |
19 | This was a consequence of the blurring of the two affinities in the early 1460s when Warwick was a loyal servant of the crown and when his men were in a sense the king 's men at one remove , a relationship formalized in some cases by entry into the royal household . |
20 | All chemical reactions were in a sense an expression of this principle ; and if it seemed in some case that the weights of the reactants and the products were unequal , then the chemist must have missed something . |
21 | The concept of the poll tax was that the more people there were in a property the more they paid , whereas under the council tax students will not add to but will deduct from the bill . |
22 | When the celebrations were at a height the lady who had been rescued said she would present a piece of silver when she got back to England to the squadron and what would they like . |
23 | Thus the question of whether a legal duty exists is for a positivist a relatively simple matter of examining the relevant commands , norms or rules of a legal system and does not involve a consideration of , for example , what this duty really means in political , economic or social terms . |
24 | It 's about a pound a word . |
25 | ’ The Church is like a picture a lovely picture in a bad frame . ’ |
26 | It 's like a kick the cat syndrome , is n't it . |
27 | I mean root ginger 's like a pound a pound , or two pound a pound . |
28 | ‘ It 's like a rave every week . |
29 | ( 2 ) payment of the plaint fee and fee for service by bailiff where appropriate ( see Table of Fees ) ; ( 3 ) where the plaintiff is under a disability an undertaking by his next friend as to costs ( N235 ) or a sealed office copy order of the Court of Protection ( Ord 10 , r 2 ) ; ( 4 ) civil aid certificate , if any , and notice of issue of certificate for service on the defendant ( Civil Legal Aid ( General ) Regulations 1980 , reg 50 ) . |
30 | ( 2 ) payment of the fee for issue and for service by bailiff where appropriate ( see Table of Fees ) ; ( 3 ) where the plaintiff is under a disability an undertaking by next friend as to costs ( N235 ) or a sealed office copy order of the Court of Protection ( Ord 10 , r 2 ) ; ( 4 ) civil legal aid certificate , if any , and notice of issue of certificate for service on the defendant . |