Example sentences of "[pers pn] [adv] [adv] [prep] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Crilly touches me all over with one hand , keeping the other on my stomach .
2 Younger bucks were wearing them inside out by this time .
3 We sell a great many long haul holidays , often breaking apart the packages then putting them together again at lower cost . ’
4 I only up to seven hours in a fortnight .
5 Its view of such women as fundamentally , even biologically deviant , distances them still further from effective action .
6 Vocalists had to bob down out of the way during instrumental breaks , and those unfamiliar with recording technique had to be man-handled by the recording director to bring them close to the horn on low notes and push them further away on high notes .
7 Each manoeuvre in their rearguard action has taken them further away from intuitive notions about that exciting enterprise referred to as science .
8 Many adult educators also regarded its concern for ‘ effective service delivery ’ , i.e. coordinating all the relevant social , health , environmental , housing agencies and concentrating their expertise and resources on particular disadvantaged communities , linking them more effectively to local needs , as a total ‘ community learning network ’ .
9 Other ministers find it useful to consult with them more broadly on political questions .
10 The same German reform reinforced the ‘ insurance ’ principle behind pensions , by tying them more closely to past contributions .
11 Mediaeval explorers from the south made little impact on their society , but incursions of southern whalers , sealers , missionaries , fur traders and administrators on an unprecedented scale during the 18th and 19th centuries exposed them more fully to southern civilization , often with devastating results ( Hall , 1987 ) .
12 Nor is it due to black people 's possession of special gifts or talents which equip them more satisfactorily for certain sporting events .
13 He assured Helen , ‘ I did not know I loved you so tenderly until this trial , sweetheart ’ .
14 Thank you so much for this month 's beautiful surprise !
15 Thank you so much for this month 's beautiful surprise !
16 ‘ Darling , I do n't want to drive you away again with impossible demands . ’
17 Are n't you once again in some sense signalling your acceptance of events — or your non-acceptance of them ?
18 But when it come to you , master Conroy , and you hardly out of short trousers … ’
19 ‘ Memory or no memory , I would n't describe you as all in one piece , exactly , after last night . ’
20 So make sure it 's safe , take your casualty from the cause , you may have to resuscitate , now if a person swallows something by mouth , there 's two types of poisons , one can go by mouth and one is er corrosive and the other is non-corrosive , but at the same time you have a liquid or tablets , now if it 's a corrosive liquid that you have swallowed or somebody has swallowed , it 's burning as it 's going down , and may I say in first aid you never ever on any circumstances make anybody sick er especially poisons , can you imagine if it 's burnt going down it 's probably perforated the food pipe and somebody comes along and overdoses on the water , because you can give sips of water for corrosive , well it 's because you 're trying to keep the airway open , if it 's burning , corrosive is burning you 'll get swelling , so this is why you give sips of water , but if you give too much your casualty will be sick and if it 's burnt going down and perforated the tubes and they 're bringing it up again it 's gon na burn coming up and go into those perforations that and cause further damage .
21 Thank you very much for that question , I think it is an important one , because we looked at our international work , as we did at all our work , over the period that we were considering reorganisation .
22 Sounds utterly brilliant thank you very much for that news Darren .
23 Thank you very much for this morning , we 'll see you this afternoon .
24 Could I ask you very quickly on that note , do you think the answer is to try and set up a voting mechanism amongst the deferred pensioners , or is the answer that one should actually appoint a professional independent trustee , specifically with the duties of looking after the deferred pensioners in the debates that you have identified often take place ?
25 Are we really closer to each other than we think ?
26 So we have the nine daughters of Benjamin James Titford : three died young , one remained a spinster , three were Edwardian brides , two married during the early years of the reign of King George V. Their lives would take them far apart from each other and from Curry Rivel itself — yet they would remain a close-knit family , for all the physical distance which separated them .
27 I will make the enquiry you request and , if you visit me here tomorrow at this time , I will either tell you what I have found out , or refuse to help .
28 It was the remains of a childish fancy , created by a story he had read , but it returned to him most vividly at this moment .
29 He feels that as he loved her so much during this time , he ca n't believe she was n't feeling the same way .
30 His ambition , which was to drive him so hard in later life , resulted in his being made choirmaster by the time he was fourteen — his first taste of authority .
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