Example sentences of "[adj] [is] [adv] [pron] [verb] the " in BNC.

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1 This is when you get the latchless needle and from the top of the machine manually hook out this fluff .
2 This is where they herd the humans , girl , ’ I said to myself .
3 Not to forget the neck , the neck is part of the face and this is where we show the the lines do n't we ?
4 This is where we keep the curvy blonde . ’
5 This is where we need the dynamic of God 's transforming presence .
6 Those three areas are : education , welfare and health , where over 18% of women in Northern Ireland are working ; this is where we find the women in the RVH ; in clerical and related jobs — a quarter of women in Northern Ireland are in that area ; and another 23% are in catering , cleaning and hairdressing .
7 So this is where we believe the market place is today with application development in the G U I desktop .
8 Er and you 'll see that in group two , the impact of the various routes on occupiers , residential occupiers , you 'll see that for the blue route and that this is where we have the number of properties demolished by the different routes , on the top line , er in terms of noise effects adjacent to new road , number of houses within a given distance , a centre line , nought to fifty metres there are are only five properties within nought to fifty metres of the blue route whereas there are thirty on the purple , twenty er on the orange , less on the red , four and five on the pink .
9 This is where I hope the pupils could become involved .
10 So this is where I book the conference place in the south of France , the minister quipped .
11 Thee being essentially black & white images with a splash/stroke of colour , and this is where I believe the strength of the book lies .
12 Right , so we 'll type a formula into this cell , this is where I want the total sales figure to be .
13 Now this is where I think the Japanese score dramatically , they spend many many hours defining things which we say it 's not worth the effort to define .
14 erm and but what is he striding out there in front of people saying this is where I see the vision for the country leading us .
15 In a very short time he heard Mary say , ‘ This is where I found the key … and this is the door … and this … this is the secret garden ! ’
16 This is where he meets the beautiful Estella for the first time .
17 and for our team achievement is climbing from the bottom to the top of the North Stack in Anglesey … its not Everest … and its been climbed many times before but this is where you taste the true flavour of British mountaineering …
18 Fig 5 ( filename POWER5.TIF ) This is where you define the commands behind the buttons on the Power Toolbox toolbar .
19 This is why we developed the habit of teaching trainees to paddle GP boats in a high , upright style derived from racing .
20 so this is why I raised the very conversation about it
21 Well that th this is why I put the memo that if it 's rejected by the tractor driver who takes that trailer out ,
22 This is why I had the right attitude when I first got to British Aerospace , anybody any , any anything anybody could tell me about how to fucking like that
23 So this is why I emphasize the fact that when you become retired your circumstances are all always going to change for the worse as far as adjustments are concerned .
24 You see this is why I want the management committee because I do n't really want to bother of interviewing somebody else and getting somebody else , do you see what I mean ? .
25 And this is why I think the approach that Harrogate would perhaps be thinking of and we ourselves would be thinking of if this is the way we wanted to go is simply to go out and get a site and get planning permission on it .
26 This is why I joined the International Women 's Peace Delegation to Baghdad , a few days before the twenty eight nation attack on Iraq .
27 . And this is why I choose the cutters because it was mechanically and er I I was quite with it , I was able to sort of get it going if it stopped , one road or another .
28 ‘ And this is why she stayed the night with her ? ’
29 This is why he calls the object of his study ‘ narrative discourse ’ , which he defines as ‘ the oral or written discourse which undertakes to tell of an event or a series of events ’ , and which he distinguishes from narrative as series of events ( story ) , and narrative as the act of narrating .
30 Now Joyce likes cats , but is alarmed by small animals which move fast and appear unexpectedly ( this is how she described the mouse which recently terrorised her ) .
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