Example sentences of "[adj] [adv] and [verb] [pers pn] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | Jimmy returned with arms full of torches , switching each on and positioning them in the brackets of the huge copper boilers , or on the floor so that surreal fans of light were cast against the dirty plaster walls . |
2 | Well when it does ste , it , you can fill that in and send it to them and then they phone . |
3 | No it 's to much of a , I hate saying I 'll go out at eight o'clock and tell him to be home and at quarter too eight he has n't come and oh , I 'm to tired really , but , so I 've always played it that I will help when I when I can , but uhum , I do n't go on the committee , cos then your stuck , you 've got to go . |
4 | I can take some down and put them in the cupboard . |
5 | You should fill this in and return it to them . |
6 | Instead you were given a medicine bottle , bought a stick of liquorice , cut this up and stuck it into the bottle . |
7 | Why did you fill this up and leave it on table ? |
8 | Then he crossed this out and replaced it with : |
9 | Cut this out and stick it in the space on your super Daily Mirror wallchart |
10 | And it was like , nothing , so we just extended all this out and made it into a stage come , a bigger dance floor cos the I do n't know why they wa always seem to have this trends that , they have these trends in the seventies and that was , and eighties of having small dance floors |
11 | ’ Farrell switched the two-way off and jammed it into the seat pocket beside him . |
12 | This is very popular in the country because upon the whole trade unions are unpopular , and therefore , if you can attach the consequences of your own actions ( for which you desire to transfer the blame to other people ) to somebody who is unpopular already and attribute it to him , you are almost certain to be home and dry . |
13 | I wrote it all down and gave it to a solicitor . |
14 | Then probably , if the weather was fine the next day or two , we would go and drag-rake it up with another horse in a drag-rake ; and then rake it all up and put it on the cock . |
15 | The best thing to do with lead piping is to rip it all out and replace it with copper or plastic . |
16 | And this particular public regulation is all about and protecting us from ourselves , and although we do need protection from of the world , we do n't need protection from ourselves . |
17 | Get a pair of scissors cut that out and stick it on these |
18 | she said yeah she said sorted that out and put her in a trolley |
19 | He grabbed Twoflower 's reluctant am and dragged him down the street . |
20 | Full-back Wadsworth 's ‘ remarkable accuracy ’ turned defence immediately to attack by the way he could ‘ take the ball from an opposing forward and send it to the forward he thinks will make the best use of the pass ’ ( Examiner ) . |
21 | So I am trying to get the new librarian to push all those books into one section … and maybe we could have a trolley and push that around and have it in the lower school … |
22 | What he had n't counted on was the tunnel effect of putting five together and pointing them into a wind that came more or less straight from the Urals after turning left over Norway . |
23 | He sacrifices four lambs at the base of the li ga , then takes two inside and kills them by slitting open the throat and the chest and cutting off one of the forelegs at the shoulder , so the heart can be taken out , still pumping , and offered to the god on a plate on the dhāmi 's raised seat . |
24 | The other traditional method is to turn the edges of the upper inwards and sew it to the midsole with Blake stitches . |
25 | These replies were highly satisfactory to the King , who summoned Baldwin to the Palace at 3.15 p.m. and charged him with the task of forming a Government . |