Example sentences of "[adv] [vb mod] [pron] [adv] [verb] [prep] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 In practice this process may be considered broken , for not only will it never interact with the outside world , but what is worse the environment can never detect this fact .
2 How long can you still live with her in the same house while making up your mind ?
3 So can we now move off four and look at five which relates to the need to er again I think maximize wight be a suitable word in here , er infrastructure .
4 So can we now move in the formal sense to looking at the next issue for discussion , which covers policy H two , the Greater York new settlement , and the first part of the issue which we shall address is , does the proposed Greater York new settlement represent an appropriate and justified policy response to the assessed development land requirements of the Greater York area , and I 'll ask Mr Davis to make his introductory statement .
5 Here is the exchange : ( 32 ) ( i ) A : So can you please come over here again right now ( ii ) B : Well , I have to go to Edinburgh today sir ( iii ) A : Hmm .
6 He did , he just can you just go through it with a fine toothcomb if you wanted it proved .
7 But now will somebody please explain to me how the hell I ever got in ? ’
8 a day now will you please come on the set .
9 You ca n't put date on erm , two weeks later or three weeks later it gets out can we just stick with a month
10 Please would you also look into this and take appropriate action .
11 Please would you therefore confirm in writing that cyclists , if necessary pushing their bikes , are to be treated as pedestrians and allowed to proceed .
12 Oh well shall I just colour in the same hats then ?
13 Well can I just say in in the interim
14 Given their straitened horizons , and their own abnormality , how could they really think in terms of something as being significantly abnormal ?
15 Assuming ( as we all do ) that our experience is somehow intrinsically different from the bat 's , how could we even conceive of what the bat 's experience is really like — that is to say , what it is like for the bat ?
16 How could she always appear to be so right ?
17 What was this spell he was casting — and how could she ever hope to be free of it ?
18 It was one thing to lose your husband to another woman — but how could she possibly compete with the manifold attractions of a fax machine ?
19 . How could you possibly get to this hospital in a boat ? ’
20 How could I even think of it when you dog my every step ?
21 How could I ever explain to them and how could I tell Jennifer ?
22 How could I ever listen to office gossip
23 It 's so utterly impossible — even if I could overcome the physical thing , how could I ever look in any way but down on him ?
24 How could I ever work for this man again anyway ?
25 How could I possibly live without a salary ? ’
26 How could he possibly look at her like that after the beauty they 'd just shared together ?
27 How could he ever admit to Maisie that the very thing that had brought them together was , like so much else in his life , a lie ?
28 ‘ And how could he still live in the houses ? ’
29 If it occurred to Ruth — and how could it possibly occur to Mrs Peterson — that there might be a good reason for this , she dismissed it from her mind at once .
30 How could it possibly happen to him ?
  Next page