Example sentences of "this [noun] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 On the other side of this coin we find Chip Beck and Lanny Wadkins .
2 Please identify this coin which was found on the Thames foreshore .
3 But before we follow this trail we must investigate the rhetoric of the Querelle , and its legacy .
4 The Licensing Authority is unconvinced by this finding which is , in effect , that the triazolam doses in comparative trials were not equivalent to those of flurazepam .
5 By this finding himself relieved , he again resumed his studies until the hour of dinner , when the disorder again attacked him so violently that it produced a fainting fit , which held him till the evening ; he went soon after to bed , and passed a very uneasy , restless night .
6 It got phased out so that the Ministry did n't pay anything at all but to get this grant you had to keep tremendous records copies of invoices and you had to get er and the bus grant and the , the permission from them .
7 But within this framework he continues to generalize about gender , seeing all , sexual relations as a battle ’ ( 1982 : 60 ) , an important part of the ‘ arms race ’ all genes conduct with each other .
8 To evolve this framework it requires energy from its roots .
9 In order to implement this progress we urgently need more funding , and as we are entirely dependent on private donations ask you , please to send whatever you can .
10 The Co-op butcher was , had got his own shop lower down You could get everything in that one street and now in this modern age , we 've got nothing , we 've got to get on a bus and get into Walsall and so this is where it , we get infuriated because you know , in this progress we 've lost out have n't we ?
11 The RAF/RAFA Consultative Committee is the culmination of this support which continues behind the scenes from Station Commanders onwards .
12 ‘ On balance then it seems as if this change we have suggested might be a good thing .
13 I do not know of any study of this change which can answer that question in anything like a precise and well-documented fashion .
14 As a result of this change I was ‘ promoted ’ chairman and virtually cut off from any effective direction of the company .
15 Now if you read what is written about this change you 'd think the BBC was about to axe Radio 4 .
16 Now if you read what is written about this change you 'd think the BBC was about to axe Radio 4 .
17 The new book , Kolymsky Heights , is says Sinclair-Stevenson , ‘ a wonderful , classy novel set mainly in Russia post-Gorbachev — the best thing in this genre I 've read for ages ’ .
18 Her first detective novel , The Man in the Queue , a highly accomplished piece of a work for a novice hand , was published in 1929 under the pseudonym of Gordon Daviot — the name by which she preferred to be known , in both public and private — though for her seven other works in this genre she took the name Josephine Tey .
19 On this computer there is no fixed-point arithmetic , and all arithmetic is done in short or long floating-point format .
20 When Goanese Christians complained of this discrimination they were told to start their own order , which they did very successfully .
21 I just wondered , colleagues if Azil Nadir of Polly Peck fame currently I understand sunbathing in Northern Cyprus would be prepared to say how proud he is to be associated with the Tories of course in saying that I do include Michael Mates , and I just wondered whether or not this watch he sent was in fact a Timex watch .
22 I feel that it shows itself in the contrast between the child 's — we 're talking about children for the moment , although obviously there are dyslexic adults — it shows itself in the contrast between the person 's ability to express him or herself in words and their ability to put it down on paper and to read it off paper , and it 's this contrast which often arouses one 's suspicions that there might be some problem and , having gone into it a little , we find that it stems from a failure of the sensory motor system — the brain is n't processing the information it 's receiving through the ear and eye .
23 If you do not know the module password , your LIFESPAN Manager will be able to tell you who manages the module ( using option 1.7.0 — View Module Details ) and , from this user you can try to obtain the password to give you access .
24 If you do not know the module password , your LIFESPAN Manager will be able to tell you who manages the module ( using option 1.7.0 — View Module Details ) and , from this user you can try to obtain the password to give you access .
25 If you do not know the module password , your LIFESPAN Manager will be able to tell you who manages the module ( using option 1.7.0 — View Module Details ) and , from this user you can try to obtain the password to give you access .
26 The Germans are said to have shot 100 French hostages in reprisal for this sinking which they thought was the work of the Resistance .
27 so we started to look for something and I wanted a bungalow , I did n't want to house again , just the two bedrooms I thought would be nice , so what we did we found this bu er this bungalow in er out of Crewe in Haslington and er we put up our house for sale , it cost seventeen thousand , five hundred and this bungalow we bought seventeen thousand , six hundred and fifty , so all I had to add was one hundred and sixty pounds , to sell the house , but the house needed change all the windows to put all the windows and the doors because they were all rotting in , you know , because the houses built er before the second world war and er what we did we put up the and in three months ' time , it in three months ' time my house went and we were moved , in September we started to sell , in January we 'd been living in the , in the new bungalow and then about three years later they built a row of bungalows on the other side where there should , should of been , they kept the land , it should of been shops , but then they changed their minds , they did , they did n't build the shops , but they built all these bungalows again on the other side , you 've been to my home , yeah , so the road that , over the road these bungalows were about three years later than ours and they were going down for thirty two thousand pound , and I bought mine for seventeen thousand seven sixty at six fifty , yeah
28 No that 's alright then and er I , I got into , I came , came back sort of when mother died , had to come back suddenly in the middle of the week and then erm I brought me family up as I say and , and my hubby he took , he took us Christmas shopping which is twenty one years ago this , this month the sixteenth my daughter-in-law and I and the little boy and that 's the little boy over there that 's now married , the one with the photograph , he took us shopping at Bishop 's Stortford cos we had n't any shops nothing here then , there was nothing when I first came here it was terrible and we went to Bishop 's Stortford and we came home in the , dinner time and I got erm , had our dinner and everything , had our meal , well we had soup and that was gon na cook at night , er you know , dinner at night so we had soup and that and erm he said I go down to the garage to put a tyre on my car , he came struggling back and within half an hour he was dead at fifty six years old that 's all he was , so I was left to bring up those that was n't married , I was left to bring up er the others you know , er I had the twins with me and Roy one of the boys and erm , er Brian the youngest one and I had to bring them up and I , after I , they , they all got married and I moved , before they got married I just got Brian with me the two twins got married , and I moved into my daughter-in-law 's house next door which was no two , seven , five the other side , I 'm sorry , two , seven , five and er I was in my house though three years that four bedroom and I could n't afford to keep you know big house like that going with just three , my , me and my son so we moved into her house and she had the end one which is still in now , we 'd done a swap and then cos er , er in the later years I was in there oh a long , long while and I loved it and I did n't wan na move but then I found , I was handicapped , I would n't get up the stairs to the toilet so I was moved into this bungalow you see and I had a friend living with me and he erm , he come here to live with me , came to lodge with me because he did n't want to go into Stevenage you see and er , after that erm , after that we , I had this bungalow and er I moved into this bungalow and er he moved in here with me and er everything happened when I got in this bungalow .
29 But it is not the fear of this judgement which so pervades the tombs ; careful preparation and knowledge of the proper formulae were all that were required .
30 Attlee , an astute judge of men , banked on Mountbatten 's ambition to provide an adequate counterweight to his proclivity for risk , and in this judgement he was proved to be correct .
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