Example sentences of "[pron] [vb -s] [pron] in a [adj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Again , there will be cases in which an event occurs which affects everyone in a given vacancy — recruitment is held , or the position is filled . |
2 | Not unexpectedly , we all learn to filter out data which puts us in a bad light , and we learn to tell our superiors what they want to hear . |
3 | So she approaches it in a better frame of mind . |
4 | Meanwhile , the repeated postponements and rising arguments over who gets what in a national health plan , and how it is to be paid for , have directed attention to the political calendar and the drooping vital signs of the Clinton presidency . |
5 | Alice in Wonderland is a text adventure game based on the very famous story 2f a young girl who finds herself in a strange land full of strange creatures and strange places . |
6 | He wants me in a purple gown to match the set and shows me drawings of the dancers ' outfits . |
7 | It establishes him in a special relationship with God . |
8 | Such a word may be useful to a literary man but it throws little light on Green 's intentions except when he uses it in a negative sense ; in one chapter he states a subject was ‘ unpicturesque and consequently not worth an artists attention ’ . |
9 | Looking at Philip Swallow now , as he seats himself in a low , upholstered chair facing her , Robyn has difficulty in recognizing the jet-set philanderer of Rupert Sutcliffe 's description . |
10 | ‘ He reveals Himself in a receptor-orientated fashion ’ ( Kraft 1979:169 ) . |
11 | The document says it is impossible not to notice how society , for the most part , makes human sexuality banal , since it interprets it in a reduced and impoverished way , ‘ connecting it only with the body and egoistic pleasure ’ . |
12 | A rhetorical figure does not disrupt a conventional meaning randomly ; it shifts it in a particular direction . |
13 | It finds her in a maximum security prison on a far-off planet . |
14 | The micro-processor , enabling previously labour-intensive work to be carried out by robots , will give us greater leisure ; the leisure industry is labour-intensive ; therefore , paradoxically , instead of reducing the number of jobs , the micro-processor has actually given us the potential to create more careers than it destroys — but only if we plan the leisure it gives us in a comprehensive and professional way . |
15 | ‘ He proves it in a hundred other ways . |
16 | And he likes it in a certain place and nobody must touch it . |
17 | Not everyone experiences it in a heady way , but the chemistry of love can be gloriously overwhelming . |