Example sentences of "[pron] [pers pn] [verb] in [det] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Having written a fairly scathing account of this approach in draft , I sent it to John Austin Baker ( as I have also sent my account of their work to Christian feminists whom I discuss in this book for comment ) only to receive a delightful letter from him which rescinded much that he had written , explained that he had been given the title , and essentially agreed with my criticism !
2 I mean I I know in that budget thing that we put together towards the end of last year , we did n't really look at it
3 I remember the books which I read in that time with a great love .
4 But an acknowledgment of bias is not a license to parade personal prejudice as sound reasoning , which you do in this issue .
5 So if there 's anything , there 's a slightly different approach to it , and one thing that we are being urged to do , through the very way in which you mentioned in another context , is to make sure that facilities are appropriate locally , and developing policies within that .
6 She had revelled in old-fashioned melodramatic stories in days gone by , and had a stock of these expressions which she used in all sincerity .
7 Following our appointment to [ nature of appointment ] and in confirmation of our recent discussion with … , we set out below the nature of the responsibilities which we undertake in that appointment and our understanding of the further services which you wish us to perform .
8 In the first , which we cover in this section , we examine the relationship between spot and forward exchange rates , and in the second we examine the relationship between the rates of return on assets with differing terms .
9 Many illuminating results have been obtained from experiments which study single sentences and sententially-structured passages — indeed , the experiments which we report in this chapter have done just this .
10 All of which we have in this brochure defined for us .
11 Unhappiness and feelings of unfulfilment , therefore , must stem from the way in which we move in this world .
12 Unlike the other activities which we describe in this section , there was no outsider initiative , input or audience in relation to the efforts of this school 's staff .
13 I do not know whether the pattern which we see in this country — of significant differences between girls and boys appearing only at the higher levels of achievement — would also apply to the SIMS data .
14 An example of this kind of theoretical inadequacy is well illustrated by the research into the clausal hypothesis of language processing which we discussed in this chapter .
15 The physical implementation and application areas of microcomputers are thus different from mainstream computers , but at the instruction set level which we discuss in this book they can be treated as variations on the central Von Neumann model .
16 Although as yet their role was peripheral , from the point of view of Russia 's subsequent history the new ideology and forms of organization which they adopted in this period merit close attention .
17 Through schemes , such as the Urban Programme and various training programmes , access to funds for local authorities has been shifted to areas in which they engage in some sort of partnership with the departments of central government .
18 One was his simplicity — which he shared in some measure with Joffre .
19 ‘ His investigative talent , which he displayed in this instance , will no doubt stand him in good stead in the future and I hope that he will have a long and distinguished career , ’ he said .
20 We shall consider the two studies which he reports in most detail , and which were most systematically carried out : a sentence completion study ( Piaget , 1928 ) , and a series of studies in which an adult interviewed children about causal phenomena ( Piaget , 1929 , 1930 ) .
21 He had been eager to start work upon the latter ever since the completion , and relative failure , of The Family Reunion — if only to correct the overt poeticizing and the unbalanced structure which he discerned in that drama .
22 In an interview which he gave in this year , he expressed his disappointment at the recent development of English poetry and suggested that any " creative advance " would come in prose fiction or in poetic drama : this is clearly what he himself was aiming at , as if he felt he could achieve in drama what he had already achieved in poetry .
23 In an interview which he gave in this year , the reporter noted how he seemed much " heartier , more unworried and more unafraid of the world than he did … five years ago " .
24 Already in 1915 Pound was making this mistake about the rivers , for in ‘ Near Perigord ’ , which he published in that year , he declares :
25 I told you I sleep in that chair , did n't I ? — It must have been about midnight because I 'd just watched this film and that did n't finish until half eleven .
26 Looking at that picture reminds me of the photos of me and Marie — you know , them we took in that photo booth .
27 We pray for our brothers and sisters in Judaism and Islam , with whom we live in this land , and with whom we share a common heritage ; help us to grow in understanding and appreciation of each other ;
28 ‘ You 're the only one I trust in this outfit .
29 These people , one of whom was a whiskered old man , carried guns which they let off frequently , rode horses at terrifying speeds across an arid landscape similar to the one I played in each day , while breathless crashing music and a small dog pursued everyone everywhere they went .
30 That 's something you documented in some detail in subsequent records .
  Next page