Example sentences of "[num] [adv] [verb] they " in BNC.
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1 | The Peerage Act 1963 now enables them to sit for all . |
2 | When he was out of earshot , Maxim asked : ‘ Did Six actually admit they were involved in that shooting in Germany ? ’ |
3 | At first the Romans consolidated their position in central Italy , moving north only in the third-century BC , when the battle of Mediolanum in 222 BC won them the most important city on the Lombardy Plain . |
4 | Three o'clock found them ready and waiting , arrayed in their most festive attire . |
5 | Ten again to start them . |
6 | Cos I was gon na to take it into Boots and they wanted five ninety nine just to have them developed . |
7 | They do n't give you any tips for nineteen ninety one though do they — are you a racehorse backer and punter ? |
8 | Go there sometimes about four o'clock give them a feed out and then we used to I used to stay there in a small shelter there . |
9 | Two more joined them . |
10 | According to Rob Strachan , who has recently completed the field work for a Water Vole Survey of Britain , funded by the Vincent Wildlife Trust , only 30 per cent of the sites where water voles were found before 1939 still have them today . |
11 | However , the 1980 Green Paper on the role of the C. and A.G. rejected the call for involvement with nationalized industries ( para. 50 , p. 17 ) and the National Audit Act 1983 explicitly excludes them from the C. and A.G. 's scope . |
12 | Superstars at the top earn large sums of money from endorsements , public appearances and sponsorship in addition to their prize money , while thousands more exploit them in one way or another . |
13 | Although the accommodation remained spartan with bunk beds arranged in segregated dormitories , nevertheless , at a cost fixed at 1/ per night plus a shilling for breakfast , extended holidays in the countryside became for the first time a practical possibility for thousands previously denied them . |