Example sentences of "[pron] [prep] [adv] [det] [noun] " in BNC.
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31 | I 'm a cocaine addict and I need something , 'cause I 've not had none for so many hours now . |
32 | And he could return to Bass , which wants to divest itself of yet more pubs . |
33 | The town was founded by the counts of Kyburg , whose name thrusts itself into so much history in north Switzerland , and their shadow lives on . |
34 | If your food and drink supplies you with exactly enough fuel to maintain your body 's activities ( the energy required to keep the vital functions going , and also for muscular work ) then you will stay at a constant weight . |
35 | He then continued : ‘ Instead of boring you with yet more politics , I thought I 'd talk to you about my recent trip to Southern Africa . ’ |
36 | We 've also included a full colour planting design from each garden to provide you with even more inspiration ! |
37 | ‘ When my name is cleared , ’ he said thoughtfully , ‘ I 'd like to set you up in better premises , supply you with as much leather as you need and get you an apprentice or two . ’ |
38 | In the dangerous sport of bobsleighing , those of you with long enough memories will no doubt remember Great Britain snatching a gold medal at the nineteen sixty-four winter Olympics . |
39 | Since the text provides you with so much material , it may not be obvious why dictionaries , encyclopedias and other books in the reference section of your library can be useful to you . |
40 | If we had proportional representation , the Conservative party would find itself with rather more influence in a Parliament in Scotland than it has here . |
41 | If a socage tenant died without heirs and intestate , his land escheated , i.e. went back to the lord of whom it was held , who in practically all cases had come to be the King . |
42 | A big animal , it is early maturing , rapid in growth and good for intensive rearing without putting on fat , but its major characteristic is its extreme double-muscling , which is an advantage in the eyes of the butcher ( the meat is very lean ) but a considerable disadvantage for purebred cows , who in almost all cases must be calved by caesarian section : the muscling interferes with natural calving . |
43 | If they had agreed a price the deal would have gone through just as SMS found itself in so much trouble with Volvo [ SMS was forced to resign the $40m Volvo account in early 1991 , after it was discovered the agency was rigging performance advertisements ] . |
44 | ‘ When you 're a bit stronger , I 'll drive you over there each time he calls me in , ’ he said , and Joanna looked at him so gratefully that tears burned at the back of Sophie 's eyes . |
45 | So perhaps I felt I must tell you all this , now , before I know you better , so that I can tell it you without too much confusion . |
46 | This would restrict you to rather few banks these days . |
47 | you do not mind my taking this method of answering your letter and I hope that you , I did not put you to too much trouble to locate a recorder to listen to the tape , I am just too lazy to write it all down and think that what I have to say I can put it better in words than what I can on paper , I 'll let you do that part . |
48 | Oh sorry Carrie , I hope we 're not putting you to too much trouble are we here ? |
49 | Come kiss me and tell me you forgive me for exposing you to so much danger and distress . |
50 | When one thinks that in France the present generation has seen neither court gowns nor a ceremony of this sort and that , with very few exceptions , the ladies of high society do not come to the Tuileries , one is struck by the fact that everything should pass off so well and without lending itself to too much mockery . |
51 | The kennel maid remarked , ‘ There 's something queer about that animal , she has been waiting for you since early this morning . |
52 | As David Norbrook has shown , the Faerie Queene had another guise in sixteenth-century England as a mischievous black-faced trickster , who at least some peasant rebels claimed to be led by . |
53 | Know most of the rooms of thy native country before thou goest over the threshold thereof Especially seeing England presents thee with so many observables . |
54 | At the time of her conversion , she was sometimes ecstatic with love ; on one occasion she returned home , and was so on fire with love which God had manifested to her that all she could utter was : ‘ O Love , can it be that thou hast called me with so much love , and revealed to me , at one view , what no tongue can describe ? ’ — Von Hugel . |
55 | ‘ Busy , ’ he replied , and while she bit down a reply of , ‘ That should keep you out of mischief , ’ Lubor went on to disappoint her some more , when he added , ‘ Mr Gajdusek has gone away and left me with very much work . ’ |
56 | I expect Sinbad feels that as I 'm in the last few months of my final year , she 'd better pack me with as much experience as possible before I get whisked away to act staff nurse in some ward . |
57 | First if you have something wrong , please supply me with as much detail as possible : your water conditions , decor , and maintenance routine . |
58 | ENGLAND 'S defeat in the first Cornhill Test has left them with even more problems than those produced by last winter 's disastrous tour of India . |
59 | However , the TUC was careful to keep well away from the whole issue of such a boycott and the Court of Enquiry now provided them with yet another excuse to defer any further action . |
60 | Yet , unfortunately this positive role so often gets lost in the way we have described earlier , with people just not understanding what is going on around them at a time when it could provide them with so much support . |