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

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1 and therefore if you 're gon na er introduce this radical land reform straight away , I mean say there is no landlord but there 's a peasant , or I mean unless the Party 's ac completely active
2 ‘ Well Else read out this bit from a book by Billy Graham , The Secret of 'Appiness it 's called , where 'e says that a man told 'im 'e only took a bath once a week , and Billy Graham told 'im there was something wrong with 'is purity of heart . ’
3 Sometimes the most immense-changes are given to us in a short story of only a few pages : Chekhov 's ‘ Let Me Sleep ’ sees an exhausted , brutalised servant-girl murder a baby in six pages ; Katherine Mansfield 's ‘ Revelations ’ sees a woman who longs for freedom and independence rush for security to an unloved but ardent suitor — because everything feels strange at her hairdresser 's , where she learns that a tragedy has occurred — in seven pages .
4 A community where you learn that the only way to survive is to fight back .
5 You would need to travel faster than light in order to end up where you started before the universe came to an end — and that is not allowed !
6 Either that or you know that the press has completely run out of lies to write about you .
7 Th you said or you implied that the women were surprised that er that they could have power and you use it effectively .
8 He or she learns because the parents always give one ( and only one ) brief , sharp warning before time out is given , for example :
9 The suspect , or the solicitor dealing with the case on his or her behalf ( subject to availability ) , may make representations to the review officer about the continuing detention — but the officer may refuse to hear these if he or she decides that the suspect is ‘ unfit … by reason of his condition or behaviour ’ .
10 Reading experiences expressed by this node are characterised , in ordinary language , by the total dependence of the reader 's satisfaction on whether he or she thinks that the author has enjoyed writing the text , on the basis additionally that the reader thinks that the author is satisfied by the enjoyment gained by readers ' interpretative efforts .
11 Using the mouse or cursor keys the user points to the main heading of the menu he or she wants and the menu pulls ( Windows ) or drops ( GEM ) from the heading .
12 The motives for bequests have been discussed in Lecture 3 , where we noted that the formulation underlying ( 9–12 ) provides no explanation as to why bequests enter the utility function .
13 Moreover , many actual nationalizations were indeed objectively functional for the restructuring of parts of the economy ‘ no longer organised as capital ’ as Fine and O'Donnell ( 1981 ) put it ; and the British Conservatives only attempted to reverse the post-war Labour government 's efforts ‘ where we believed that a measure of nationalisation was a real hindrance to our island life ( Winston Churchill , cited in Weiner 1960 : 80 ) .
14 There is also a four-vector force F defined by using the relativistic equivalent of Newton 's second law of motion where we note that the differentiation is with respect to the proper τ time which is a Lorentz scalar .
15 To take one last example , when we read in Canto 101 ( and many other places ) about ‘ Mont Ségur ’ , the gloss we need is in the Michelin Guide to the pyrenees , where we learn that the Château of Mont Ségur saw the last stand of the Cathars or Albigensians , another heretical movement of the Middle Ages which is mysteriously connected with the quest of the grail .
16 Civic Trust officer Jane Taylor said : ‘ This will involve finding out how many people ride , where they go and the problems they have getting there . ’
17 Where they die unless the conditions are suitable , ’ Lucy said .
18 However , institutions may put forward proposals for fully integrated courses in any subject areas where they believe that a case can be made .
19 As our General Election rises to its soggy climax , you ought to compare the success of an economy where they believe that the best government is the least government .
20 This brought them to Teviot , in the Hawick area , where they learned that the Balliol company had passed there , avoiding the town , the morning before , having apparently camped at Goldielands just to the west .
21 The section entitles a board to make a closure order where they consider that the licensed premises are no longer suitable for the sale of liquor .
22 When many of these are taken by one person it is still useful for him or her to ensure that the separate responsibilities are kept in balance — and essential if the work is to be of use to other teachers .
23 To allow the primary sufferer to wake up in yesterday 's clothes , reeking of vomit , may seem unkind and unpleasant but it is a good way of getting through the denial system which might otherwise lead him or her to think that a lot of fuss was being made over nothing .
24 ( b ) The pressures on the police may be such that they will try to avoid keeping records especially where nothing is found or they feel that no request for a copy of the record will be made .
25 On his journey , fearful and probably suffering from reactionary depression , he slept a night under a broom bush , where he dreamed that an angel touched him on the shoulder and bade him rise and eat .
26 Lovage is illustrated as a woodcut in a herbal of 1491 , and merits inclusion in Culpeper 's list of useful plants , circa 1645 , where he advised that the bruised leaves , " fried in hog 's lard , laid hot to any blotch or boil , will quickly break it " .
27 David showed prudence in doing the things committed to him by Saul ; Job exemplified simplicity ( in the good sense ) for it was said of him that he was a simple man ; Solomon , in Proverbs , highlighted patience , where he said that a prince is made mellow by patience .
28 This was explained by Lord Diplock in Pioneer Shipping Ltd v BTP Tioxide Ltd , AC 1982 724 at 736 , where he said that the English system treated the construction of written agreements as questions of law because of the legacy of trial by juries who might not all be literate .
29 1–4 Malcolm MacKinnon , an old man , was lost in a storm between Bridgend and Mulindry where he lived and a week later had not been found .
30 Could you tell me anything about Foster ; where he lived and the dates he worked ?
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