Example sentences of "[adv prt] [coord] [adv] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 Do n't put too much make up on or else it 'll look dead false !
2 Come on or else you 'll miss the story , it 's nearly time .
3 that 's lovely James , that 's fine , OK , you 'd better put plastic spoons on or else you 'll make , be in trouble because if you floated a metal spoon , now what would happen to that ?
4 The public did not , therefore , understand what was going on or why there was trouble ’ ( ibid.:13 ) .
5 Oh , she 's got all the answers up her sleeve I expect , but that has caused tremendous debt charges , which , at the moment , have to be paid , and whether we could find a private operator to take them on or not I do n't know , but private operators operate throughout the country and in many other of the districts within the county of Oxfordshire , and they operate efficiently and do just as good a job as the City Council are doing in the present situation .
6 Get down or else you 'll slip
7 and let us know if she 's coming down or otherwise I shall have to call down there .
8 And to be honest they I I 'm whether they 're stringing us along or not I do n't know .
9 I mean it is it is genuinely part of the definition but the definition they had originally has got stretched and stretched so now it it does n't there 's no obvious tie up with oxidation , meaning burning and taking up oxygen , and reduction is the of opposite , so if you get the oxygen out or you put hydrogen in or where it gains electrons .
10 Well he did n't know whether she was gon na come in or not you see .
11 right , tie it off in a reef knot , if you 've got bits that are left dangling they 're too long and you ca n't go round again because it 's gon na make it too tight , you can either tuck them in or else you can fold them down , a nice clean plaster and put it right over the top , okay ?
12 You can either leave it in or out you know .
13 Many organisations fail to take account of this and the importance of personal contact becomes lost in techno-culture or the ‘ memo culture ’ of the organisation , while the individual has no sense of where he fits in or how he can contribute .
14 Then I told myself that it was the state I was in and somehow I pulled myself together and came home . ’
15 What I , one of the things that I , I think you must have somewhere , and that is that at some stage you order something , you get it in and somehow someone has to tell accounts that yes , they can pay that invoice .
16 But I took Li Tracey 's book in and probably I 've seen the Tracey and marked it down there you see on Tracey 's instead of Linda 's , which , I mean that 's a genuine mistake int it ?
17 They cheered again when the train passed under the next , much bigger shaft , again the sunshine came flooding in and again you could see the sky and brickwork and even trees .
18 Cos without him you could n't get your harvest in and tomorrow it might be raining .
19 But it would be old lamps and Peedie bits of and when you speak about long ago times I associate the smell of paraffin and sawdust and cooking apples and all that you go into Peedie shops and there was a fine relationship , you go in and Well I used to be for the old folk and they were all awful good to me , and the particular and we used to go every Saturday night to a shop called Blacks and it stayed open till nine o'clock .
20 The city was big enough to hide in , to become lost in and anyway she knew a few people here ; Slater was one .
21 In Hitler 's case the Americans came in and suddenly we all had something in common .
22 The sun goes in and suddenly you feel the frost rising !
23 Erm obviously you 've seen what Ro what Roy has put in and obviously you 'll come to a view on the position .
24 They were taken aback as the huge hangar doors blew in and fortunately they made a move to an interior fortified wall just as the roof was torn off and the building collapsed .
25 After some hours a train came in and fortunately we found a carriage , packed with refugees of course , but it had a lavatory at the end of the corridor .
26 And George says she 's come in and like they ban her from going out .
27 RUC officers decided when troops were to be called in and how they were to be used .
28 And they can talk to you and show you around , so you can have a look and see , at the way the calls come in and how they deal with them .
29 She wondered again what sort of trouble he was in and how she could best help .
30 I remember picturing the wet grease-proof paper it would be wrapped in and how my mother would cut off its head and scrape out its insides .
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