Example sentences of "[verb] they be [prep] [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.
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1 | Secondaries can usually be identified because they cluster around the larger primary , often forming chains and other small groups , and because the impacts producing them are at low angles and low speeds and so the craters are usually elongated . |
2 | I hope they 're in safe hands . |
3 | Indeed , the trees which separate them are of different varieties and are , generally , more gracile than those at Woodchester ( Neal 1981 , no. 87 ) . |
4 | You know they 're on brown rings with little little tiny screw screwed in metal rings in the brown things ? |
5 | In the first category are those often described as ‘ Western ’ , although strictly speaking they are Near Eastern religions . |
6 | To April he explained , ‘ I believe they 're on different pipes to us so it 's just possible their water might be unaffected . ’ |
7 | Shocked old-guard MPs , who had imagined they were in cushy seats for life , suddenly found Right-Ons dominating their constituency parties with a potent mixture of brow-beating and attrition . |
8 | It had taken them only a short time to realise they were from opposite sides in the Therapeutic Wars , but it had caused little friction . |
9 | Although Maggie could n't make out the exact words , she knew they were from both sides . |
10 | I thought they were for sore throats and things Gary ? |
11 | The skills and expertise required to manage or advise them are in many respects different to those required in a large organization . |
12 | Well I said they 're except British dogs in America . |
13 | About half said they were in stable relationships . |
14 | The USSR , as before , remained ready to further its own interests wherever it could , and those interests were not always in agreement with those of Western governments — nor had they been in tsarist times . |