Example sentences of "[noun pl] [pers pn] [vb mod] [adv] [verb] the " in BNC.

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1 I was full to the gills of roasted cat , which is one of the reasons I ca n't stand the animals now .
2 From these accounts I could n't recognise the Tom Watt I thought I had known .
3 In the sea of pebbles I could n't see the bolts — so much for environmental concerns — but fortunately it was easy climbing .
4 Having identified the most likely candidates I shall then consider the critical experimental evidence ( which again derives from studies of the role of contextual factors ) .
5 In other words you ca n't see the power , you can only see the result of the power .
6 ‘ In other words you could n't bear the thought that there might just be one female in a hundred-mile radius who did n't fall apart at the seams every time you deigned to smile in her direction , ’ she spat back .
7 On the subject of Fanatics you should always buy the full allowance .
8 yeah there 's a lot of different designs you ca n't move the back of these
9 By moving the flux points around and changing their strengths we can easily assess the effect of a changing core field on VGP path .
10 While we demand oil in such quantities to fuel our petrol driven lifestyles we can not ignore the consequences , both short term and long term .
11 When those hybrids overran the guards they might simply tear the last survivors apart .
12 They lead to a formal , didactic , teacher-centred approach , they operate with devastating force upon teachers newly trained in ‘ activity methods ’ , but in the tough , bleak conditions which obtain in some schools they may well represent the only possible alternative for a struggling teacher to adopt .
13 In showing off to the raw recruits he might even throw the small plane into such daring bankings or dives that it could n't be manoeuvred out of .
14 ‘ In very strong winds I ca n't prevent the sail from lifting me out of the water . ’
15 Right so the functional form test , if we look at the kie squared version , right , again we 've got a very small er test statistic implying there 's no breach of functional form right , the , the log er specification , right , seems to be working okay , there 's no problems with it erm if we now look at normality we 've got a bit of a problem with normality , right in that our test statistic is now four point nine , if we look at the critical value at the five percent level of kie when kie squared two , ah it 's not too bad , our five percent critical value of the kie squared two is five point nine nine , so although that test statistic is reasonably high , I mean you 'd probably reject , oh yes , we can reject the null at ten percent of normally distributed errors we would n't reject the null at five percent erm let's just have a look at in actual fact at those errors to see what the problem is .
16 But Tony Murrell , managing director of financial advisers Fraser Marr said : ‘ In most circumstances we would not recommend the use of educational trusts because these can only be used for school fees — nothing else .
17 Although tripodding involves an additional operation ( and unnecessary extra work in good weather ) , in high-rainfall areas it will often reduce the need for extra turning and tedding and the risk of crop loss or damage .
18 With its simple , discreet lines it will scarcely dominate the room visually ; but the anonymity ends there , for it will certainly bring the concert hall closer to home than many listeners could possibly have imagined .
19 in a lot of cases you 'll just fog the issue if say ‘ How do you feel about it ? ’
20 In the majority of cases you will simply send the application form and use the completed forms as the means of eliminating the applicants who are clearly unsuitable .
21 Is th , is there any ever , ever any situation which , I mean , I know in in most cases you 'd obviously accept the er , the opinion of the er , claimant 's doctor .
22 At other times you may knowingly take the risk .
23 For years I could n't catch the bloom on a child or young girl 's cheeks , but more recently I managed to capture this with one stroke of the knife .
24 Sterling … in those days you could n't float the pound .
25 Everybody 's coming out again apart from er bumps she ca n't have the bumps .
26 To the same implications we may now add the advantages of having high-level staff expertise to call on .
27 ‘ I had to tell buyers we could not guarantee the painting could leave France .
28 As social workers or therapists we must often accept the client 's definition but , too , we must often look behind the client 's eyes to find the problem 's underlying nature .
29 In those days we would always start the hay-making at Hury , a parcel of land we owned two miles down the road .
30 Besides even if they did n't win it again for the next two million years we 'd never hear the end of it .
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