0 used to describe a performance or show of artistic works by just one person: --
This new one-person show has been positively received by the critics.
Because the building standards regulations do not cover flats specifically designed for one-person accommodation, the space requirements in respect of these flats have been relaxed.
It is our contention that those accidents would most likely not have occurred if the trains had not been coverted to one-person operation.
We could examine the hurdles, consider when the provision might kick in, and perhaps limit it to one-person businesses.
He makes the very important point that one is going to have to discuss risk to make sense of a disagreement between utilitarianism and the priority view in one-person cases.
Granted, the task of storytelling is enormous, and some of the criticisms made above result from the fact that a one-person project cannot accomplish every part of it.
For instance, living longer does not imply an extension of good health and certainly not that one can manage a one-person household into advanced old age.
Demographic changes revealed by the census, in combination with the constitutional requirement of one-person, one-vote, led a number of states to redraw their election districts for political office.
Many residents are identified as single with one-person households reaching 37%.