Example sentences of "[subord] [pron] [vb -s] [verb] [adv] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | No one has turned against her until she threatens to break up Stanley and Stella 's marriage . |
2 | Even if she does dance again Nicola , who has lost part of her right eye 's sight , will have to relearn how to pirouette to overcome her disability . |
3 | Yeah , unless I du n no if she 's gone up home she 's getting a lift off erm thingummy |
4 | Yes , she has been lucky but , if she wishes to live down south because of her work , why not ? |
5 | If one decides to give away £5m to encourage the arts , I do not think that it is a very sensible way to give it to my noble friend Lord Archer , who is a very rich man already , and who gets £6,000 a year out of the pockets of taxpayers who are very much poorer than he is . ’ |
6 | COSE also has no time to go off on an invention tear , he said , if it aims to take on Microsoft Corp . |
7 | COSE also has no time to go off on an invention tear , he said , if it aims to take on Microsoft Corp . |
8 | It does it if it wishes to force up interest rates . |
9 | Steve Kerton says it 's good to be back racing in this country and he has n't had a brilliant start but if he keeps picking up points might be in with a chance of winning |
10 | Steve Kerton says it 's good to be back racing in this country and he has n't had a brilliant start but if he keeps picking up points might be in with a chance of winning |
11 | If the debtor resided in one district and carried on business in another , the petition must be presented in the latter ( r 6.9(3) ) and if he has carried on business in more than one district , the petition must be presented in the court for the district which was his principal place of business ( r 6.9(4) ) . |
12 | If he wants to take up sports again , the patient must be guided by his physiotherapist , so that he does not attempt exercises which are too hard , which would inevitably increase his spasticity . |
13 | ‘ And I wonder if anyone has considered how delivery vans and wheelchairs are going to mix . ’ |
14 | No , unless someone 's got just Christmas . |
15 | In Lambert v. Lewis ( 1981 H.L. ) Lord Diplock suggested that in that case someone down the chain of distribution who suffers economic loss ( i.e. because he has to pay out damages for breach of contract ) , might well be able to claim indemnity direct from the negligent manufacturer under the principle in Donoghue v. Stevenson . |
16 | If payment is received in response to the LBA , the haulier should acknowledge receipt and seriously consider whether he wishes to do further business with this reluctant payer , If no response is forthcoming from the debtor , the haulier should sue or instruct his solicitor to sue , as threatened . |
17 | In the world of an inside ethnography as Favret-Saada identifies , ‘ one is never able to choose between subjectivism and the objective method as it was taught ’ ( ibid. 23 ) , so long as one wishes to find out answers which , in traditional ethnography , are often missing from the finite corpus of empirical observation . |
18 | Rather is it that by not forgetting one 's origins , in maintaining one 's own identity and in adopting unhesitatingly before all Europe the position of parvenu — a glorious title when one has arrived there thanks to the votes of a great people . |
19 | With its inflation still rising , the country on the verge of a perilous wage-price spiral and public finances deeply in the red , the Bundesbank has made it clear that it will keep the German economy locked in a vice of high interest rates for as long as it takes to squeeze out inflation . |
20 | The most notorious of these powerful informal alliances is the military industrial complex , but this is only one of many such groupings that a president must accommodate as he seeks to bring about policy change . |
21 | ‘ I took you for Adam , for he 's gone down Mountsorrel to fetch in some supplies . ’ |