Example sentences of "[Wh adv] [pers pn] [verb] [verb] [noun pl] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 I remarked on the truculence , boorishness and dishonesty which I had encountered , routinely , in the hotel and in restaurants ; indeed , whenever I had had dealings with anyone in a public capacity .
2 Whenever I want to knit bands of reversed stocking stitch now , I know two ways to do it which are much better than using the garter bar .
3 Whenever she had allowed thoughts of sharing a bed with Fen to enter her mind , just the imagining had racked her body with sensuous shivers .
4 Whenever we have to remember lists for lectures , appointments or even shopping , we simply associate each item or idea on the list with the appropriate hook .
5 How I like to do things in the old-fashioned way ? ’
6 Mary told him how she had taken provisions to Granny Fordham , then seen the deer in the back of the car , and been chased , and finally how she had cross the marsh to reach the keeper before the raiders got away .
7 What we need is a perspicuous representation of our use of the word ‘ remember ’ , and of how we come to use words like ‘ yesterday ’ .
8 Or how they had inflicted cuts with a small sharp knife , then sprinkled salt into the wounds and kicked him round the room so he had to twist sharply and feel the pain of the salt crystals in the raw open flesh .
9 She thought about the Josephs , apparently guilty of an especially heartless and greedy crime , and wondered how they had got drugs into the United States and whether they would ever do so again .
10 But perhaps someone from Midland can explain how they hope to attract accounts from youngsters in their first jobs who have not passed their driving test and have never had a passport .
11 Coun Tomlinson , chairman of the social services committee , said : ‘ The Government has now announced how it intends to allocate funds for the next four years .
12 Sometimes he would revert to a previous journey to a particular spot and described his personal experiences of several years before as in Vol I , pp. 111–113 when he describes how he had made sketches for plate Nos. 46 , 47 and 49 of Sixty Large Etchings .
13 So when he fled in terror from the slopes of Ben Macdhui in the Cairngorms one day in 1891 , people were reluctant to dismiss his story of how he had crossed paths with the ghostly Big Grey Man — Am Fear Liath Mòr .
14 To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs how he intends to develop relations with the Baltic republics .
15 That 's when I began to have doubts about the company .
16 Several times when I 've had foods with hidden milk products , the symptoms have come back almost immediately , ’ she says , ‘ Now I am full of energy .
17 However I want to get opinions from any of you on how to go on from here .
18 ‘ That 's why I 've kept changes to a minimum . ’
19 They are but I 'm just I mean y'know it 's cos it 's not really correlation yet so I 'm sort of u that 's why I 've put quotes round association .
20 That 's why I came to see things for myself . ’
21 The reason why I have detained readers of New Scientist with such minutiae is that the ‘ Mink on Shetland ’ presents us with a case study of the way in which decisions affecting the wildlife of Britain are being left to the ephemeral whims of local personages .
22 When Tallis rode up this narrow track she sent stones tumbling to the glittering water below her , and at a certain height she stopped to listen to the sound , recognizing it from a time in childhood , from a time when she had summoned images of another world , and Harry had called to her for help .
23 She 'd been sent there for contempt of court by Essex magistrates when she refused to answer questions about her personal finances in a poll tax case .
24 However large or small your business operation , whether you manufacture goods or provide a service , there may be times when you need to borrow funds for the day-to-day financing of your working capital or to tide you over an unexpected cash flow problem .
25 Securicor have joined the cowboys on the contract guarding and really I mean you must be getting sick of us getting up every time about security guards , but it 's an important problem and you must know that a lot of you must work at places where you 've got guards on the gate and we all should take a bit of interest in going to see these guards , find out that they 're working for two pound or two pound forty an hour , they 're working as many hours a week as they 'll actually work with no overtime rate , no night rate , no benefits worth having and I mean really I wish you 'd go to your companies and try and arrange site allowances , cos that 's the only way we 'll get any improvements , but when we talk about resolving grievances , we just took in Yorkshire region someone to a tribunal for constructive dismissal .
26 It tries to jump the gap and in doing so sets fire to y the surrounding material that the blanket is made of and that 's where you start to get problems on your fire blankets .
27 Jesus wondered where she 'd learned words like that .
28 Explain clearly why you have included pieces of information .
29 Three points need to be remembered when we start to incorporate questions of social and spatial mobility .
30 That 's why we 've got things like a glossy magazine , a team video ( of the Wallabies in South Africa ) , lunches , golf days and merchandising on the go .
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