Example sentences of "but [pers pn] [verb] [vb pp] [pron] a " in BNC.
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1 | They moved across to the bar together , and the stranger explained , ‘ No , we 've not met , but I 've watched you a good many times — in the ring . ’ |
2 | ‘ Sorry to disturb , darling , ’ she said to Bob , ‘ but I 've brought you a bottle of Sauternes to wash the stew down with , so you can celebrate . |
3 | ‘ But I 'd sent you a cheque to cover my share of the quarter . ’ |
4 | Would you believe that he said I 've got to work on the aeroplane this week , I 've got the week off , I 've got to work on the aeroplane , I , you know , I shall be alright , down the airfield , er on the Wednesday he arrived to see how we were getting on , complaining like made because he had n't been able to find where the cottage was , I said but I 'd left you a detailed map , |
5 | ‘ I have not yet joined the Pioneers , ’ wrote Fritz on 15 November , ‘ but I have got myself a job as a radio reporter with the United Press of America . |
6 | ‘ But I have watched you a little since you have been in this house . |
7 | ‘ Sounds like a good idea , but you 've left it a bit late . |
8 | That blue dress of yours looks well enough , but you 've had it a while now ; you need something new to wear . |
9 | But you have made it a robbers ' cave ( Mark 11:17 ) . |
10 | But she 's offered me a relief post as I say , where I go round and help but she do n't know how many hours it will be . |
11 | But we 've given him a thorough going over and I 'm sure it 's nothing more serious than a mild concussion . |
12 | ‘ I think Kaiserslautern would regard themselves as favourites , but we 've watched them a lot and feel we can score against them , ’ he said . |
13 | I do n't intend to discuss the housing , whether seven hundred acres , sorry seven l land for seven hundred houses is owned by the City of York , that 's not part of our case one way or the other , but we have offered you a distribution of the Greater York provision figure between the districts , because from Barton Willmore 's very extensive experience of participation in local plan work up and down the country , I think we share the view that er City of York have , that Ryedale have , my colleagues to the left and right on this side of the table have , that there does need to be a distribution , otherwise there will be at best confusion as to whether local plans comply with the structure plan , and at worst a game of of pass the parcel and everybody will be conforming , but nobody will actually be possibly meeting the figures , and that is the situation that I do n't think anybody would wish to see as a result of er the outcome of of alteration number three , I mean I do n't know how the County Council would would really be able to say whether they thought a local plan conformed to the structure plan , without knowing what that distribution was , perhaps in some bottom draw manner which is not now the approved way of going about these things , so that I think there does need to be a distribution for the proper planning of York , and before coming on to our to explain our figures a little bit , I should also say , perhaps in in response to remarks Mr Thomas made earlier on about the general character of the York area and the need to protect that , that that course is precisely what the greenbelt is for , and what it does , it is n't necessary to extend that concept across the whole of the vale of York , and therefore to seek to er discount migration outside the greenbelt . |
14 | Bankers and international business persons are not supposed to be natural campaigners , but they have proved themselves a match for this moment . |
15 | She had wanted to stay with her brother , but he had called her a child , he had referred to Tallis as the woman whom he loved , and Morthen had taken both statements to her young heart . |
16 | He 'd applied to join the police in his final year at university ; it had been an unfashionable thing to do but he 'd given it a lot of careful thought . |
17 | But he 'd left it a bit late for consideration for her welfare , she thought hazily . |
18 | ‘ Maybe , man , but he 's left it a bit late , eh ? ’ |
19 | It 's his age that is against him , but he 's helped me a great deal since I came into the Irish squad . ’ |
20 | But it 's given you a spreadsheet it takes ages to load it |