Example sentences of "[subord] [pron] [prep] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 You do n't get a second chance where someone like Julius is concerned .
2 Jennifer came up through the LA rock scene where plenty of women were playing ; Donita and the others came from Chicago , where it was a lot sparser .
3 ‘ . It remains a valetudinarian place , with baths a mile out of town to the east where plenty of people still go for treatment .
4 For the reading parent there is now plenty of help .
5 There is now plenty of choice for the investor who knows what he or she wants to invest in , but there is still something of a vacuum for investors with less than £50,000 which they want to put into shares directly .
6 THE recession of 1980–81 was the worst anybody in the engineering business had seen ; now plenty of people think the current recession is causing still more grief .
7 And now none from Miss Henrietta , whose untidy hand she knew so well .
8 I very much enjoyed seeing you on SONGS OF PRAISE from G some months ago .
9 ‘ I do n't seem to remember seeing you in church , Bridget , ’ said Clare .
10 No sign of nerves , but Moby was definitely still in that highly excitable stage where everything in life is fun and needs exploring .
11 The more restricted arena of the Chamber itself was divided into the Presence Chamber , where anyone with access to court might go , and beyond it the Privy Chamber and the most private apartments , to which entree was restricted .
12 The other thing is the Information Centre where lots of visitors go , and if you 've got an information pack , if you want us to buy it , that 's fine , and we 'll put it in there , you know , What 's On ?
13 Q : What about at dog shows where lots of youngsters handle dogs ?
14 Well where lots of people
15 erm We saw the beginning of the factory , industrialization , big manufacturers where lots of people worked and where cloth could be churned out at a very fast rate , and therefore , cloth was cheaper .
16 Although everyone in Rush River told the story the same way , most of them said ‘ and their slaves ' instead of ‘ and their people , ’ but Martha knew that Nana did not like the word ‘ slave . ’
17 In fact , because of the immense size of the country , those in Melbourne can celebrate two hours earlier than everyone in Perth .
18 some of you are a lot younger than me of course , it could be a lot smaller , but er er showing this to teenagers , if you work out what age a teenager will be in the year twenty forty , they 'll be about er in their mid sixties so this period of time , basically , is the time over which our present er generation of schoolchildren will have their adult life .
19 Remember that silly thing we did at school once me with Charlotte and Suzanne and somebody else , do you remember ?
20 ‘ In terms of general plant , Piper was bigger than us , while we were larger than them as crane operators , ’ he said .
21 Roy Nash ( 1973 , p. 17 ) discovered that pupils as young as eight years were able to say which children in the class were better than them at reading , writing and number ; and their self-perceived class rank correlated highly with the rankings made by the teacher at the researcher 's request ( and therefore not explicitly available hitherto for communication to the children ) .
22 They 're quite good it looks better than them for office do n't it ? they 're dual power battery and solar
23 Indeed we have ‘ given the rod ’ to nations which have been better acquainted than ourselves with tyranny and inhumanity .
24 Above all else , he 's a businessman and he knows I 'll do the work for less than someone with papers because he knows I have no choice . ’
25 The Latin pauper means a person of modest means rather than someone without food , roof , or clothing ; Ovid defined him as ‘ a man who knows how many sheep he owns ’ .
26 longer than someone in love .
27 It seemed rather typical of her luck that she had ended up with the wrong sort of cat , and she could n't help wondering if Miss Hardbroom had made sure that the misfit kitten had been given to Mildred , rather than someone like Ethel .
28 ‘ He 's not as aggressive as he might be but that could come , and he has more skill and speed than someone like John Fashanu , who plays an intimidating game .
29 What I 've got there there are three scenarios , one from each group , so someone from Group A — Who 's in Group B ?
30 Er we did we were gon na raise a point on that the clash of the regulatory rules and the producery duty of under trust law , you know and I I think there you know there there was a comment that that I picked up with Professor Gower you know in his report which I think where he said the Government obviously have greater confidence than I in reliance on pristine trust law in relation to modern commercial developments such as unit trusts and occupational pension schemes , which its founding fathers never contemplated .
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