Example sentences of "king ['s] [noun] [conj] [art] " in BNC.

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1 This splendid though rather whimsical riverside house was built as a granary , conveniently positioned at the very head of the navigable part of the River Cam along which barges laden with corn could travel from King 's Lynn and the fenland farming areas .
2 His financial transactions extended throughout the eastern counties , and although the bulk of his fortune almost certainly came from moneylending , his six houses in King 's Lynn and the quay attached to his own stone house in Norwich suggest that he also had interests in trade .
3 Halfway between King 's Buildings and the city centre are the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine 's Summerhall buildings .
4 The problem for the police was that her body was hidden in King 's Wood and the rucksack dumped 6 miles away at Barnard Gate .
5 They also pointed out that the alternative would not ‘ plug into ’ the east coast rail lines from King 's Cross unless an expensive underground link was built from Stratford into central London .
6 However , even if one takes the view that King 's Cross is essential , there are better and more appropriate ways of building and developing a new station at King 's Cross than the one that British Rail has effectively forced upon us .
7 Mr Bob Clay ( Lab Sunderland N ) asked what British Rail would do if it no longer ended in King 's Cross and the terminal was not needed .
8 Postponement would mean a two-year delay in improving services from King 's Cross and the nearby St Pancras station and the implementation of safety measures arising from the King 's Cross underground fire in 1987 .
9 I expect to rub out the new rail link under London , the national centre for wind-power , the cross-Channel terminus at King 's Cross and the Little Podlington by-pass .
10 The letter refers to King 's Cross and the channel tunnel rail link .
11 There is no InterCity link between London King 's Cross and the Stratford terminal .
12 For the sake of consistency we have given the length of the Phoenix King 's reign and the rough dates in the Sigmarite calendar of the Empire .
13 The Royal bedroom in each car occupied roughly one-third of the car 's length , and communicated with a spacious bathroom fitted with a full-sized bath ; adjacent to the bathrooms were small sleeping compartments for the King 's valet and the Queen 's maid respectively .
14 Bruce 's forces were defeated first in Methven wood by the English , and then beside Loch Tay by Comyn 's uncle , the Lord of Lorn The king 's sister and the Countess of Buchan who had crowned him were dragged out of sanctuary where they had been sent for safety , and exhibited in cages hanging from castle walls at Roxburgh and Berwick .
15 It was enacted that offenders were to be brought before a member of the King 's Council or a Justice of the Peace for examination ; hunting in disguise or by night , and wilful concealment of such offences were to be punished as felonies — that is , by death and forfeiture of property .
16 The writs , i.e. the King 's commands that a person shall appear in one of the King 's Courts in answer to a claim , are issued in his name , as they still are today , and are issued from his office .
17 A king 's marriage and the legitimization of heirs might well be " reasons of sin " that allowed the pope to intervene .
18 [ A. B. Emden , A Biographical Register of the University of Oxford to A.D. 1500 , vol. i , 1957 ; J. Otway-Ruthven , The King 's Secretary and the Signet Office in the XV Century , 1939 ; E. F. Jacob ( ed . ) ,
19 ‘ If the King 's serjeants-at-law or the lawyers in King 's Bench heard of this , ’ he replied , ‘ they would say you were a traitor .
20 For example , the silver pennies made with identical designs under King Edward I and II can be subdivided by the form of the king 's name or the shape of the crown he wears ( fig. 3 ) .
21 The king 's concession that the cost of troops should fall on the rich and powerful rather than the poor of the community was insufficient to placate the commons , and in the October parliament of the same year they presented a petition entitled ‘ La demande de la Commune ’ in which they called for the abolition of the maltote , the punishment of purveyors who took prises without making payment , and pardon for debts .
22 The further they went into the forest the more it seemed as though the village behind , with Fat Watt and Diggory the King 's man and the priest , represented the enemy , and the miles and miles of trees she had formerly and still a little feared had become a sort of sanctuary , a hiding place .
23 She was a king 's daughter and the wife of a prince , whether in his palace or his prison .
24 At the Essex Forest Eyre in October 1634 , for example , the judges , after consulting with the Chief Justice of the King 's Bench and the Barons of the Exchequer , decided that there was no right of common of pasture for sheep on the forest wastes .
25 By this he was referring to the chief justices and three judges of the Court of Common Pleas and the Court of King 's Bench and the chief baron and three barons of the Court of Exchequer , being the three courts of common law .
26 The gatehouse is closed on the king 's orders until the arrival of the coroner . ’
27 An account of the establishment of Henry I 's household written just after his death opens with the writing office and chapel , still a single department , which organized the king 's writs and the king 's prayers .
28 Sir Edward Woodville , the queen 's brother , was Admiral of the Fleet ; and the Marquis of Dorset , the queen 's elder son by her first marriage , was Constable of the Tower of London which housed the deceased king 's treasure and the vast store of armaments held ready for an invasion of France .
29 People need to be satisfied that the environmental assessments for King 's Cross and the high-speed link are accurate .
30 Monarchs , nevertheless , remained formally at the centre — the Cabinet was still the King 's Cabinet and the Prime Minister first and foremost only if the monarch declined to attend .
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