Example sentences of "[pers pn] [pron] [adv] [vb base] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 I think it right to bear in mind the evidence of Mr a solicitor now specializing in re-habilitation work who is himself alas wheelchair bound , erm , he has directly relevant experience and he expressed the view that er two ramps leading up to the vehicle from the rear could be unsafe and were in his view generally less satisfactory than the platform with which the conversion equips the Nissan Serena , in those circumstances it seems to me I really have no choice but to er adopt the alternative of the conversion and er there is an agreed figure of thirty nine thousand , eight hundred and sixty six pounds in relation to that .
2 with him , I I sarcastically make an appointment
3 Er , the I I also make the point , that er , my understanding is having now talked to a number of the other C A B's , that in fact they were looking to Thamesdown money advice centre because this money was actually to replace funds that previously had been er , available through the Allied Dunbar sponsorship scheme , and which has , which I gather was withdrawn er , at very short notice , and they were looking to Thamesdown to er provide that support and resource as a county resource , and I I therefore felt that it was right to bring it forward .
4 Mm I I I still think the middle .
5 I I actually have a bucket of cold water just behind the door and I could n't care what age they are , whack .
6 I I quite like the idea of these double ones you see do n't they ?
7 No er well well if he 's got any sense I I always tell the advertiser I said now the adv I said you as the advertiser have got to keep worrying you may have to chivvy them up .
8 In the sixteen years since , it has sold 75,000 copies , and people are still finding it helpful , and I myself often take a chapter for meditation , when my own spirit feels low and dry .
9 course well if you get it from them you just get the money and then
10 alright , mind you I still get a bit nervous now , I get a bit do n't know why , I always
11 We you just get a phone call from us that says , Here 's here 's your next assignment .
12 ‘ Whoever may be the incumbents of office , it is we who really control the situation . ’
13 Although this was this organism , microbacterium tuberculosis , named tuberculosis was discovered back in eighteen eighty we we really understand the pathogenesis of the disease very poorly !
14 Well it is it 's it 's planned pretty well as you know we we always take the summer off we never work during the summer because we do our recording and we make our video and then we 're ready for the road and the video 's released and there 's promotion put into it so er if we go to Australia which we 'll go on our next May and June you know it 's a good time out there for selling product as well so we will have an album released before we get out there and and everything will be planned out .
15 We were sharing it out between four so we got we we always say a quarter I think I think it 's a good idea the way the Americans say a fourth cos you can it ties it up with the four shared out between four people .
16 To conclude the story I do n't know who pegged the match but afterwards I talked to one of the locals who told me they never peg the stretch where I was .
17 So ten years later and the man comes back , the ma they cos they 've never come and checked on them they just sling the food through a but open up the cell where the man had Samantha Fox and millions of little kids come running out , all different ages and sizes , millions of them .
18 no , no I 'm not that keen on it I just have a couple of biscuits and a cup of tea when I come home
19 it you just put a stroke through it .
20 And then when you 've finished doing it you just fill a book in .
21 Yeah if you 're taking it you just want a laugh and you know you 're not affecting anyone else but if you 're dealing you 're pressing other people to buy it .
22 We have shown we can do it we just need the money .
23 As the years pass , she says , without realising it we gradually lose the ability to breathe the right way .
24 It we further remark the way sexual difference is oft en presented within psychoanalysis as unavoidable and ineluctably fraught with pain , so much so in some cases that it warrants description as a tragic ontology , it becomes tempting to dismiss it as an expression of existential Angst suitably dressed in pretentious intellectual rigour and elegant abstraction , and , as such ( some might add ) , the epitome of psychoanalysis itself .
25 On behalf of my sixteen-year-old daughter , and the rest of us who occasionally wrestle the receiver from her , I should like to say thank you .
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