Example sentences of "[pron] have [adv] moved [adv prt] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Micky and the two girls were looking for a fourth person — someone having just moved out and on . |
2 | Two of those references are to research by Professor Harry Smith and his colleagues in Birmingham — work which has certainly moved on during the intervening decades . |
3 | Mr is still moving a motion which refers to the party conference proposals which have now moved on to bills before the house . |
4 | And if memory serves ( what was she called , that girl who did the PR for Windscale , Sellafield I should say , and Aldershot FC ? ) , oh yes , Daphne Grierson , who has now moved on to greater things and is image adviser to Nigel Canada ( is that correct ? ) the teenage fiddle-player . |
5 | planning , before you 've actually moved in and get |
6 | A survey in a Southwark Salvation Army hostel in 1987 found that nearly 40 per cent of men who had recently moved in had symptoms which pointed to a diagnosis of schizophrenia . |
7 | It was very quiet and the noises from the wood became distinguishable , as if the wood itself had suddenly moved down nearer the track . |
8 | Arsenal fans still talk about former Highbury heroes Michael Thomas and David Rocastle , the main men from the Championship-winning team who have now moved on to Liverpool and Leeds . |
9 | Imagine you have just moved in to a new flat . |
10 | She 's just moved up from Kent and has come with packing cases full of cups and medals : a winning record which was topped this week with the Champion of Champions trophy and an ambition to become the world 's number one . |
11 | We 'd just moved in when we discovered we had a mouse in the kitchen . |
12 | But we nearly fainted when we asked which cottage — it was the one we 'd just moved out of ! — |
13 | In fact in fact , we 've just moved in today into this place . |
14 | We 've now moved on in part of question your question five B and erm in my response to that I 'm suggesting , and I hope it 's not just semantics , picking up the point made just before we broke for coffee , is that there 's all sorts of things called the countryside , and this policy is is directed at the open countryside . |
15 | We 've now moved on |
16 | We should not find it easy to go for a single currency if we had already moved down the federalist route in a dangerous way on foreign and defence policies . |
17 | ‘ I 'd finally won custody of my daughter Eva and we had just moved down from Scotland to Leeds with my boyfriend Glynn . |
18 | To be sure , we have all moved on since films directed by Hitchcock were unravelled in the search for strands of ‘ Catholic guilt ’ , but equally I still teach gay students who find it genuinely empowering to learn of the homosexuality of a cultural figure as one contributing factor to the work that he/she produced . |
19 | We have now moved on from looking at syllables to looking at words , and we will consider certain well-known English words that can be pronounced in two different ways , which are called strong forms and weak forms . |
20 | They 've just moved in recently . |
21 | when they arrive in school in September they were level two and they 've now moved up to level three . |
22 | So , in the winter evenings , they would draw the curtains and watch The Sound of Music or Bridge over the River Kwai and feel as though they had never moved out of Twickenham . |
23 | Since then he has steadily moved on and mostly up . |
24 | He has now moved over a mile away from Youngs ' home . |
25 | But when I got there , he 'd already moved on to the Middle East . |
26 | He had recently moved out to a house in the suburbs , and he sublet the house to us for the remaining three months on his lease . |