Example sentences of "[adj] [adv] [pers pn] [verb] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Eight o'clock you get a bit of
2 Well strange enough we have a connection with the Dalesman editor
3 Erm he come in about that so we wrote a letter saying that I wo n't do the job for ninety pound , but I 'll stick to the original
4 So we had a we stopped in there , we were only gon na have one in there but it was alright in there , we had a nice table and that so we had a good natter
5 To every child in this country , there is one language with which he must necessarily be familiar , and by that , and by that alone he has the power of drawing directly from one of the great literatures of the world .
6 To do this properly you need a team .
7 is totally different so I did the first lecture with what my idea of to find myself talking to a a contract housing guy whose biggest order was two thousand pounds
8 And I 'll have to get a two look , cos she was a thirteen and a half so I bought a one .
9 And of course I er wirelessed the office headquarters in Edinburgh told them about this so they sent a mine sweeper out from Tobermory .
10 And you 've got ta get them like this so he sees the next one coming so he does n't think ooh , he 's seen this , he 's thinking of this one and not this one .
11 The first two of those were also included were made public , they are in the issue 's papers it did not make public the county council 's proposal as to who should be participants for each topic since those were matters for the the panel er to ma take a view of and I understood er from er the question er the answer to the question that it had been made clear that er the information had been made public except as always Chairman , er our legal office 's of the council always like that caveat that in case anything had been missed out I had just in fact suggested that perhaps not everything had been made public so I anticipated a possible supplementary question from Mr .
12 According to his own account , as soon as he was brought to Rome as a hostage in 167 B.C. he became a friend of the two surviving sons of Aemilius Paulus by sharing some books with them .
13 But it wo n't be arriving there until they get this Well they have the C D ROM , they just have n't got it up and running .
14 It can be seen that human sweat is actually hypotonic ie it contains a lower salt concentration than the plasma .
15 Half shyly , half proudly she opened a pair of narrow , carved wood double doors and I went inside .
16 at this then they have a ti entitlement to training
17 That 's a procedural thing , we do one thing , we do another then we do the other , then we come back and do it again .
18 Postage , stationery , fourteen O six raffle tickets , eleven pound , making a total of two thirty twenty six as against on the other side the income , three ninety six so we made a hundred and sixty six pound on on the open show which is a great increase on last year because last year we only made twelve pounds something twelve pound and a penny we made last year , so this is a great increase .
19 In Fig. 16.4 above we observed a switch from direct to indirect taxation since the late 1970s .
20 ‘ When you come into this department from the outside then you realise the wealth of information inside the government .
21 The Sister Constance , who was the then the principal sister there she let us have the field so we got entertainment laid on we invited a celebrity , I think our first celebrity was erm I think it was Lord and Lady and then each time we had a different one , we had entertainment the whole time we started , about half past two and then we had entertainment until six then we had an interval then we had entertainment till twelve o'clock I even took my piano down onto the field so that we could have music .
22 From 1250 onwards he received a number of ad hoc commissions to act as a royal justice and was regularly commissioned to act as a gaol delivery justice at Newgate and elsewhere .
23 Well to buy very much else I think a washing machine
24 She shows me my fault , that ever I trusted a liar and thief .
25 He liked a bit of old bluey , and admittedly they were a bit near the mark , but that aside he seemed a nice , quiet , polite man .
26 At three o'clock he drove the four miles to Rose Brady 's house .
27 At three o'clock he licked the salt from his lips
28 At three o'clock she heard the banging of car doors .
29 eyepiece , it 's painted white so it gives a sh shadow .
30 I looked out of the window and it was the back garden of Dr Jane 's house , and when Mrs Pitt came up to serve me and I complained Dr Jane laughed , and it was really Dr Jane all the time and the whole place was horrible and dark and dirty and when I got outside to follow my friends the ones who were usually in the dream there were n't any people and we were in a sort of studio and the village and the inn it was so obvious now I felt a fool for going in and sitting down and expecting to be served was the crudest sort of cardboard stage set like a model for a child 's history lesson and the colours were horrible and it smelt of a sort of horrible glue and — —
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