Example sentences of "[pron] [adv] [adv] [verb] [pron] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 When you stop taking them altogether now do you mean ?
2 No I 'll put that on it 's easier save that for your Mum put them on here did you say ?
3 But er go on leave them on there leave them on there
4 But it turns me on just to hear you say it . ’
5 The Irish have settled into this country and there are communities of them all over do they go and see your concerts and if they do that must mean a great deal to them I should think ?
6 I warn them all not to take her seriously , but they all do , poor chaps !
7 She took the report , told them all where to find her if necessary and shut herself in her office .
8 So the programme 's the bit that you do , and then to them basically just cutting it , while it 's still down , you were still , the awkward thing is
9 Now , before you right them down just tell me what they are and then we can go back and write them down .
10 what they hand them down here do they ?
11 and you have to press them down anyway to make them all stick .
12 Her sleeve of care was unravelled all right : her life was a basket of woollen shreds , all shades and textures and not one of them long enough to do anything with .
13 Telling the poorer workers that others were producing more , simply led to demoralisation ; they already knew that , and telling them so only made them feel worse .
14 The farming bills do n't amount to much as the ones who do call me in always think they 're doing me a favour and consequently should n't be charged much .
15 She was in one of those things Marcus puts me in sometimes to carry me about .
16 They saw a great deal of each other , but , because Diana was so much younger and usually just one of a party , no one who saw them together ever suspected she was a girlfriend .
17 he did , I 'll have his then , I said no you wo n't , but I like them , I know , but you ca n't have Martin 's , as Martin will cry , I buy him another one he 's absolutely mad on cream eggs , you never liked them when you were at his age , you do n't really like them much now do ya ?
18 I most heartily wish it may be in my power to serve and save so much innocence , beauty and merit .
19 If Sir Alastair has broken this spell , as I most sincerely hope he has , the Chartered Institute may , after more than three quarters of a century ‘ provide a source of authoritative views on transport for communication to Government and the community ’ ; just as its founders intended .
20 I most sincerely hope you do n't ’ said Valerie .
21 But Lord Aldington insisted : ‘ I most definitely saw him on May 25 and I remember having dinner with him on two successive nights around this time .
22 But when I saw you that first time in the garden , I most certainly wanted you , My Cassie .
23 I most often use it as a resource which the children can go to during their own dramatic play .
24 Whether this was Winston 's idea , or His Majesty 's I do not know , but I so strongly suspect His Majesty who we knew to be one of the best Kings we have ever had .
25 Not listening was always one of my faults and one of the reasons I so frequently found myself isolated in misunderstanding : like a careless rider , cut off from the company , alone and benighted for failing to pay attention to the prevailing agreements as to intention and direction .
26 ‘ But when I see those stones here , and ponder — as I was doing when I so nearly precipitated myself upon you — ’ he laughed , gently , at his own folly and again rapiered a look to Miss D'Arcy who , in control now , returned to him the dreamy interest of the truly hooked — ‘ it was Egypt I thought on .
27 Of course , he could want the word ‘ abverb' ( as in ‘ pleasur ab ly' ) , but I so much doubt it that I 'd bet on it . ’
28 I so much wanted her to ask that I would n't tell her .
29 It would have been a richer joy — but , indeed , as I so often tell you , I delight to picture you in a childlike serenity .
30 I so often hate him , I think I ought to for ever hate him .
  Next page