Example sentences of "[vb infin] [pers pn] [adv] [verb] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
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1 | Do you want me just to leave it ? |
2 | Do you want me just to catch you something first Alex ? |
3 | I 'll speak to my mum cos my mum does n't want me bloody stripping |
4 | ‘ Why do yer want me ter have a key ? ’ |
5 | Shilton 's goalkeeping and extra pace in the back four should make them hard to beat next summer , but goals will be a problem if Lineker does not rediscover his finishing touch and the team as a whole lacks subtlety and imagination . |
6 | Organizations are arenas within which some things will tend to hang together and be adopted by power-players as a bundle , while other forms of combination may be far less likely to occur as a coherent package , perhaps because they are less coherent or because the alliance which could make them so lacks a position in the field of power to be able to constitute the necessity of its choices . |
7 | I do n't think any prison will make me better , but it might make me not come back . |
8 | My reprieve could make me somehow feel quite snubbed . |
9 | After what that evil bastard did to me , you could n't possibly tell me anything about him that would make me more frightened of him than I already am . ’ |
10 | Some of them do n't want them either thank you . |
11 | As long as we can get them inside , we do n't want them outside do we ? |
12 | Or do we want them really to understand what they 're doing first presumably . |
13 | She does n't much want them actually to touch her . |
14 | You do n't want them now do you ? |
15 | Do you prefer me then to get it all from Rosette Fournier ? ’ |
16 | peas about , yeah but he does n't , he does n't eat them much does he ? |
17 | Why do you think I why do you think I gave you the fucking job eh ? |
18 | I do n't think I even join up some , I mean there 's lots of words I do |
19 | I do n't think I even heard his name . |
20 | d I do n't think I even I do n't think I even feel Did I say guilty ? |
21 | I do n't think I even liked him very much . ’ |
22 | ‘ What makes you think I even possess such clothes ? ’ |
23 | I had no awareness of the supposed stereotypical mother of that era — lipsticked and aproned , waiting at the door — and do n't think I even encountered a picture of her , in books , comics or film , until the early 1960s . |
24 | I just do n't think I just do n't think repossessions should happen . |
25 | ‘ No , I do n't think I ever looked inside . |
26 | All sorts of people held their hands out to me but I do n't think I ever got anything . |
27 | Er I remember it so vividly because it , at our house it was quite er an event because mother and father were so Labour and my brother , who erm he , I do n't know why , he 's not alive today and I ca n't so I , and I 've no idea , I do n't think I ever asked him because I 'd be too young , but I do know that the friction was in the house because he was working for the Conservative and she was the first woman that we ever elected er she , this , this lady did . |
28 | I do n't think I ever saw J[ack] work more than half an hour without the cry of ‘ Barboys ! ’ — ‘ Coming , dear ! ’ , down would go the pen , and he would be away perhaps five minutes , perhaps half an hour ; possibly to do nothing more important than stand by the kitchen range as scullery maid . |
29 | I do n't think I ever saw it . |
30 | I do n't think I ever saw a nude woman in the house — certainly there were women in various states of undress … but never nude . " |