Example sentences of "[pron] [noun sg] [Wh adv] [pers pn] [vb past] " in BNC.
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1 | Then I 'll park my car where you said and I 'll sit there till |
2 | ‘ This was equally true of the teachers , since they , together with the headmaster , could have decided to stop my research whenever they felt it threaten them ; equally , if they had accepted me with open arms it would have meant that the boys would not have trusted me greatly . ’ |
3 | Flt Lt Marshall was extremely embarrassed and always avoided my eye whenever he came into the Met Office after that . |
4 | Just like the World Cup were in my day when you had proper football. ; - ) ) |
5 | But wh , my argument why they did n't cancel that cheque |
6 | ‘ You sound just like my old nurse , scolding me for not playing with my cousin whenever she stayed with us . ’ |
7 | I 'll tell you what , I love my holiday when we went on our own and it 's the best time we 've ever had . |
8 | On being asked by her/his commander why he had become so fat , she replied ‘ 'T IS strong beer and tobacco which is the cause of that ’ . |
9 | She must have been able to tell from my face how I felt about that . |
10 | He had to go you see , but I mean er later in my lifetime when we lived in the in the village at I can remember very very well the the er the miners there er going to work and then coming home again , going to work and coming home again , nothing for them to do . |
11 | Back at home I asked my mother why we spoke in English . |
12 | Medical reports exist that show a woman being taken off the pill by her doctor after complaining of a rattling in her chest whenever she coughed . |
13 | Four months later she left the country and travelled constantly , following her lover wherever he wanted to go . |
14 | Moreover , he was becoming increasingly annoyed at the Communists ' blatant attempts to maximize their influence wherever it mattered — in , for example , the army and the administration — and to dictate strategy . |
15 | She had lost count of the number of times she had slapped his hands from her body whenever he waylaid her outside . |
16 | Washington insiders believe that she told her husband how she felt and suggested he should use the ‘ excuse ’ of Graves Disease , a condition affecting the heart rhythm which they both suffer from , as a way of standing down from office . |
17 | At one of the camps Miss Picon asked a woman at her concert why she had brought her baby , who never stopped crying . |
18 | And I remember when I was a nipper , er er being up there and they had , they always had a box in the back of their caravan where they kept two or three hens , and , and , and er they used to have this game bird . |
19 | Unionists did though make war service a main plank of their electioneering whenever they had the chance . |
20 | Flinging over in bed for the hundredth time , she tried to ignore the subtle , spreading ache in her stomach whenever she thought about Roman 's last hungrily demanding kiss … |
21 | She was suffering from a stiff neck which gave her pain whenever she turned her head . |
22 | She opened her mouth to ask her mother why he 'd said that , and just as abruptly closed it again , realising that this was n't the time or the place to discuss private family matters . |
23 | She had made that declaration and that commitment that she would go with her mother-in-law wherever she went that her God , Naomi 's God would be Ruth 's God , and that Naomi 's people , would be Ruth 's people . |
24 | " My dear Sara , " he said , " your great-aunt was at perfect liberty to divide her estate how she chose . |
25 | But throughout her course , and while at the Royal College of Art doing her MA , she continued to develop her felting whenever she found time to go north . |
26 | I just remember her backside wherever I saw always Helen 's backside . |
27 | Dorcas had changed the wiring so that he could make it ring whenever he liked . |
28 | Four minutes later Mervyn grabbed his second when he met a cross from his brother , Neil , at the far post . |
29 | Deane was always a threat and two minutes before half-time he claimed his second when he turned in a low cross from Barnes . |
30 | Again Wexford was becoming bemused by the colours , by the seductive spectrum that caught and held his eye wherever he looked . |