Example sentences of "[pron] still [verb] in [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | I still believe in democracy but not without discipline . |
2 | I still live in hope , though , always changing hairdressers , praying the next one will give me my perfect style . ’ |
3 | His formative years were spent living at a small terraced house in , a house which still remains in use today . |
4 | The group is now trying to encourage members to increase their commitment to 1 per cent ( which still pales in comparison with the US , where there are 2 , 5 and 10 per cent clubs ) . |
5 | They passed the fountain , which still lay in darkness , having beaten Stephen and the team of electricians he had had working until minutes before the guests ' arrival — the one and only thing that was not finished . |
6 | Obviously they had been infiltrated by the enemies who still lay in wait for him in Russia . |
7 | His tone had changed again , and now he spoke like a worried father who still lives in hope for his son . |
8 | Fortnum recorded that the foundry which cast his lion was that of Sbordoni in Rome , who still engage in metalwork there today . |
9 | Do you still stay in touch with the other district nurses ? |
10 | ‘ Do you still dabble in art history ? ’ |
11 | And do you still keep in contact with er your pals in the navy ? |
12 | ‘ Do you still keep in touch with her ? ’ |
13 | In this case it was probably a matter of a commercial bourgeoisie , itself still rising in importance , which had not yet found its styles in art . |
14 | She still keeps in touch with friends made at that time and sends a copy of the Glenpatrick News to the retired Chief Industrial Engineer , Mr Wyffles . |
15 | ‘ Does she still keep in touch with her mother ? ’ |
16 | And then we she got married we still kept in touch with one another and I got married and we did n't live far from one another . |
17 | People do not always speak — or write — in complete sentences , yet they still succeed in communicating . |
18 | He still seemed in charge there . ’ |
19 | The Attorney General , Sir Hartley Shawcross , agreed with the Lord Chancellor that the grading of murders would be unworkable , adding that he still remained in favour of providing for the abolition of capital punishment in the Bill . |