Example sentences of "[be] [prep] [adj] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 I have been through such a storm before , and it is the gusting that is most dangerous . ’
2 ‘ And , Sir Richard , ’ Cranston continued , ‘ you have now been through all the memoranda , documents , household books and accounts in your brother 's possession .
3 Equally , everybody knows why everybody stays , they 've been through all the arguments a hundred times before and now they do n't need to any more , now they know they 're not to blame and their husbands are n't the homicidal maniacs some theorists would have them be .
4 ‘ Hopkins 's sister is a widow and has been for many a year , ’ the fellow replied .
5 People say that Lee is either precious or lazy ( make up yer minds , f—wits ! ) , but it 's become manifest that these songs are worth all the tons of grief and introspection and the endless re-tuning .
6 His principle is to maintain the gardens and grounds as they are for all the residents , so that from outside it is not apparent that the building has been divided up .
7 ‘ You must show cookie here how grateful you are for all the trouble she 's taken . ’
8 Supposing that the essential words conferring the primacy on all successive archbishops of Canterbury were in fact in the letters which Lanfranc mentioned , why did he go on at such length about the facts drawn from Bede , when a single quotation from one of the passages granting the primacy in perpetuity to the archbishops of Canterbury would have been worth all the rest of his argument put together ?
9 " But it 's been worth all the pain and trouble . "
10 If the contract had been ‘ straightforward ’ then it would have been worth half the £1.31 million that he was to be paid .
11 We 're trying to look to the gaps , and I wonder if we are , as you suggest in the comments that you 've received perhaps losing , we 're not perhaps sufficiently direct in addressing the parish organizations which are after all the core of a parish .
12 Well , now I 've been past many a field of hay but it does n't smell like it used to in my young days .
13 " Employment on the railways as in other sections of the transport industry can not be said to have been of such a character as to fit in with the theory of labour aristocracy . "
14 The conduct had also to be intended to provoke a breach of the peace or to have been of such a nature as to have been likely to have occasioned such a breach .
15 We consider for the moment only the case where His non-negative and D is positive , and assume they are of such a size that overflow does not occur ( see problem 2.4 ) .
16 a single prostitute who provides services in private premises to one client at a time without spectators is guilty of the common law offence of keeping a disorderly house if it is proved that the services provided are of such a character and are conducted in such a manner … that their provision amounts to an outrage of public decency or is otherwise calculated to harm the public interest to such an extent as to call for condemnation and punishment .
17 The changes identified by the Tomlinson report are of such a magnitude and involve so great a culture change that the planning and decision making will need to be made with a great deal of care and integration .
18 Earlier in his essay on the rule of law Oakeshott had suggested that to deliberate the jus of lex is ‘ to invoke a particular kind of moral consideration : … the negative and limited consideration that the prescriptions of law should not conflict with a prevailing educated moral sensibility capable of distinguishing between the conditions of ‘ virtue ’ , the conditions of moral association ( ’ good conduct ’ ) , and those which are of such a kind that they should be imposed by law ( ’ justice ’ ) ' .
19 We may even feel , as certainly I do , that some of the later cantos are of such a nature that it 's hard to conceive in any age of a way of encountering them other than the way we 're here embarked upon .
20 No particular form of words is necessary to create a floating charge ; it suffices if the intention is shown ( a ) to impose a charge on assets both present and future , ( b ) the assets are of such a nature that they would be changing in the ordinary course of the company 's business , and ( c ) the company is free to continue to deal with the assets in the ordinary course of its business .
21 No , it did n't form part of it and erm if it were to be done it would be having , shall we say , a political impact , but the sums are of such a nature that they are of no significance in the context of the budget as a whole .
22 strip , straight them open so that , they 're like that a bit instead er
23 ‘ You 're like all the rest , ’ he said with disappointment , reading her helplessness with humiliating ease .
24 ‘ I suppose you 're like all the rest — a city-kid who 's never been away from the busy streets before . ’
25 Been like that a couple of days .
26 In the past month in here , well , it 's been like that every day .
27 Resenence Jeopardy still expected him to work hard , was still friendly and attentive , but had n't he been like that the day before ?
28 just got really unsafe unless the two sites are like half a mile , well at least half a mile if not , but I
29 ‘ Well , considering I 'm working as hard as I am with all the stress involved , I think I 'm probably very fit . ’
30 Now these counting numbers they 're okay are n't they you know where you are with those no problem .
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