Example sentences of "[prep] [det] [conj] [pers pn] [vb base] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 Think about that before you pack your bags .
2 Oh I do n't know about that but I think they 're likely on the same
3 Well I du n no whether I I 'm in a position to comment on that you know you 'll have to ask them about that whether you know we 've all learnt from each other really .
4 ‘ We 'll know more about that when we see him .
5 I worried about that when I read it .
6 Think about that when you open your next beer . ’
7 Okay obviously you would n't want us to do anything about that until you resign I guess .
8 It was when I was voted off the school council and I was really broken up about that and I suppose I forgot to post it …
9 Now in some respects what I think should happen , is we should , yeah we should not be negative about going on the course , but in terms of the financial implications I 'm very worried about that and I think there is a erm , there is some need for the client to say , that if he wants us to go on this course we 're happy to go on it , but that he should look seriously at financing and he plus it should have been in the tender document .
10 I 've thought about that and I think it 's a bad policy for any museum to be known to be selling pictures or any work of art .
11 Nobody has come to see me today about that and I think it is disgraceful that the surgery has been disrupted , ’ he said .
12 Erm simple as that if I give you a list of telephone numbers you 're not likely to remember them for long , you might be able
13 As far as er the honourable gentleman for Edinburgh Central is concerned , he said there was a case for a wider inquiry into the auditing o of companies , well that is not something specifically called for er by Bingham although I acknowledge that a case can be made for that but I think we want to be extremely careful before extending that in the way that he and the honourable member for Great Grimsby proposed beyond the direct er responsibility to the members or the owners of the company .
14 ‘ You can tell me all about this while you pour me a drink , ’ he said quietly and they went into the kitchen .
15 And you could both write something maybe about your grading maybe a little bit about what was good , what was hard , what was easy , what was boring about this cos I think there was a lot of hard work , there was n't much play in it today was there ?
16 Mike in the audience and he 'll probably give me a rollicking afterwards , cos I have n't prepared anything about this and I suspect I wo n't be able to speak till the red light .
17 I have thought a long time about this and I think I know the answer .
18 In the words of Alfieri : ‘ Most of the time now we settle for half and I like it better . ’
19 Here Alfieri repeats one of the main issues raised in his introduction , ‘ Most of the time now we settle for half and I like it better . ’
20 ‘ Most of the time now we settle for half and I like it better ’ .
21 Especially when you 're not gon na like me for this because , you 're not gon na like me for this but I think one think about Foxy is he is two faced .
22 Can I just say as we , one of the reasons we 're talking through this if you have something that yo , ah that might be useful !
23 Look , I 'll even clean the upstairs rooms after all if you want me to !
24 I would hope over the next few years we actually do move towards increasing towards that but I think we will have some severe difficulties , particularly with the planning department where large numbers of members of the public do visit the area .
25 They know nothing of that and you know nothing of them , to your mutual survival .
26 If they ca n't get sufficient profit out of supplying gas in the U K I think British Gas is on the verge of withdrawing from the gas market in the U K , and that a lot of jobs in this country and I think we ought to be aware of that and I think we ought to be campaigning to make sure that does n't happen .
27 ‘ Yes , but you do n't think of that when you see them in bud , ’ Ianthe protested .
28 His argument begins with a rejection of ‘ universalism ’ and a claim that different varieties of language can be associated with different levels of such general qualities as ‘ objectivity ’ : ‘ there are gross differences among languages , such that it does seem reasonable to say of some that they allow their users to approximate to neutral , objective description ’ .
29 Derbyshire folk may query the authenticity of this but I defy them not to enjoy the results .
30 ‘ One word of this and I tell your local rags where you learnt your craft . ’
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