Example sentences of "[vb base] [adv] [prep] [det] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Most of the time we communicate verbally to each other , and we expect our horses to do the same . |
2 | If you suffer badly from these symptoms , go and see your doctor who should be able to help . |
3 | Further , being at or near the top , these persons are those most strongly identified with the goals of the organization … they believe in the , organization , they want to attain its goals , they profit personally from such goal attainment . |
4 | You doant eat enough in those foreign parts , surely . |
5 | I do intend to er to attend inaugural meetings with each of the C P O s er with a view to looking I mean obviously at some stages you said to me that I would probably have to attend at short notice |
6 | But the texts lay together without much complaint , and , with the exception of a swerve into showbusiness Camelot at its conclusion , the evening intrigued . |
7 | A few checks will soon show which tags ( if any ) connect together at each position of the switch . |
8 | But the opportunists suffer terribly under these conditions . |
9 | Ankles remain together at all times and feet should be over the knees . |
10 | First , the flowers themselves should be suitable for pressing — there is no point in offering to press someone 's wedding flowers when their bouquet consists of , say , chrysanthemums , pale carnations , large daisies or gerberas , since none of these flowers press successfully at all . |
11 | Steer clear of these subjects . |
12 | ‘ A bicycle is the thing I want most in all the world ! ’ |
13 | He would sit there all day doing this , sleeping sometimes in his chair but never tuning off , trying to make all these pieces of television fit together in some way . |
14 | Members of groups , especially those in their formative years , find themselves thrown into unnaturally close contact with one another , squashed together in the backs of uncomfortable vans night after night , obliged to eat , live and even sleep together for much of their time . |
15 | It is essential to avoid discussing one language variety in terms appropriate only to another . |
16 | D. From long experience the Wills family know that cereal crops ( wheat and barley ) normally grow better in this region than in other parts of Britain . |
17 | One can think of these fluctuations as pairs of particles of light or gravity that appear together at some time , move apart , and then come together again and annihilate each other . |
18 | Expect only in that , it was a danger that you were going to incur expenditure , which is of an unlawful n nature , pending on the clearly wish to comment . |
19 | They read them and yes they send away to several and then you have to score , you have to have something better than somebody else . |
20 | Our perambulations were interrupted now and again when other young friends with babies , hove in sight and , being infectious , we had to wave from a distance and hurry away from each other . |
21 | You can run the whole thing from home and the machines fit easily into most cars . |
22 | Poststructuralism , deriving from Mallarmé as well as Saussure , has developed a heady rhetoric in which signifiers are prised apart from signifieds , in Hawkes 's phrase , and then fly away in all directions in their ‘ free play ’ . |
23 | I have n't come up with a snappy title yet , so suggest away on that and other points . |
24 | Other examples appear elsewhere in this chapter . |
25 | What I say is , if they want to live here they should live like us , not sleep outside on that mountain like animals . |
26 | In discussing texts we idealise away from this variability of the experiencing of the text and assume what Schutz has called ‘ the reciprocity of perspective ’ , whereby we take it for granted that readers of a text or listeners to a text share the same experience ( Schutz , 1953 ) . |
27 | They were much more likely to stick to the ‘ maginot line ’ of municipal antiracism and therefore , paradoxically , to experience any shift away from that defensive position as a retreat . |
28 | The first shift away from this kind of deixis is where the centre of orientation ( origo ) but not the related objects are part of the canonical situation . |
29 | All Englishmen say rilly like that . ’ |
30 | We say more about this later in the Annual Report . |