Example sentences of "of one [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Kant tried to link the idea of numerically identical particulars with the idea of one space and one time , both conceived by him as the a priori forms of our intuition .
2 Here is a true story of one chance remark .
3 That is , you can have a shoal of bream of one size at or near the bottom of a water , and a shoal of bigger or smaller bream above them .
4 Outside of one size , we should only have one size on the net list .
5 The ending of one relationship and the beginning of another is a complex matter .
6 However , it may be misleading to lose sight of the overall pattern since the outcome of one relationship will affect responses to another .
7 I know of one boy who tried it and lasted only fourteen hours !
8 Prenatal diagnosis , however , has been performed on the fetus of the aunt of one boy , and genetic counselling has been requested by several other members of the extended families .
9 And , with the exception of one boy , the boys overestimated their rank .
10 He spoke of one boy ‘ who did n't really have a lot going for him ’ who managed to qualify to compete in regional athletics events .
11 The parents of one boy , Moses Bentum of Bexley , south London were rejected because , according to the council , they had made themselves homeless by defaulting on the mortgage payments .
12 You could almost think that was a stereo spread of one performance but if you listen to it on headphones you can hear it properly . ’
13 With the Government in attendance in morning dress , he presides over investitures , the opening of Parliament , the Queen 's birthday parade , Remembrance Sunday and two local festivities — the peppercorn ceremony ( where freemasons pay a symbolic peppercorn for the use of the state house ) and a bizarre ceremony in which the Maritime Museum pays its annual rent of one cannonball .
14 Above : King George V and Queen Mary making an official visit to the Fylde Coast on 8 July 1913 , are watched by crowds in the grandstands provided by a parked line of tramcars , at a cost of one shilling each .
15 For the bargain price of one shilling and sixpence the audience could watch alternating film and stage shows .
16 In 1664 Thomas Burton was fined the sum of one shilling for letting his wife wash puddings in the town beck .
17 An extra charge of one shilling ( 5p ) was made for permission to view the house , and the £5,500 it made was added to the Queen 's charitable fund .
18 1771 This meeting also agreed That the sum of one shilling & sixpence Sterling be levied on each Quarter Land towards payment of Expences of a Dyke arround the Burial place in Kilchoman .
19 1771 This meeting also agreed That the sum of one shilling & sixpence Sterling be levied on each Quarter Land towards payment of Expences of a Dyke arround the Burial place in Kilchoman .
20 Members paid a fee of one shilling a year and one penny a week for each book borrowed .
21 Visitors to the Crown Room in 1819 paid the princely sum of one shilling each — at least £7.50 at today 's prices — just for the privilege of viewing them .
22 The high perspective is indulged for the space of one couplet , before Leapor 's muse tumbles back into the world of work .
23 The reverse of the coin is internationalism , a feature , some might say , of twentieth-century art ; not so uncommon either in other periods , where art historians struggle heroically to identify differences between the art of one country and another .
24 The claim of the second is a reason against accepting the claim of the first only when the two authorities are incompatible , as are the claims of two governments to be legitimate governments of one country .
25 If they were n't sure , they why not select certain games only or certain areas of one country and then see what happened ?
26 A history teacher is content to cover the history of one country or continent over a few decades .
27 In accordance with Article 57 of the Treaty of Rome , which requires EC countries to recognise each other 's formal qualifications , thus allowing citizens of one country to work freely in another ( see The Art Newspaper 's EC supplement No. 17 , April 1992 , pp. 7–10 ) , the Victoria and Albert Museum has appointed a German , Dr Norbert Jopek , to a senior post in its Sculpture department .
28 Consequently an effective system of international trade requires the adoption of exchange rate arrangements which enable the currency of one country to be exchanged for currencies of other countries .
29 The EPU recorded surpluses and deficits of any one of its members with each of the others , and settlement was made via the EPU on the net deficit or surplus of one country with the rest .
30 It seems unlikely that the earlier experience of one country having an autonomous capability in the industry will be repeated , now that the web of alliances has permeated almost all sectors of the industry .
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