Example sentences of "[unc] [adj] [adj] [noun] [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 now if I was to go there and back that 's eighty pence , I mean I could get , for , for that e extra eighty pence I could get a few things in there that are dearer but I mean I like going down the town anyway and just wander and go back but I do get a few more bits in there now than I did .
2 And , a all these things I thought were so difficult !
3 And that actually means two dotted crotch two dotted quavers I mean , does n't it ?
4 And then when my wife died and I had to sell all you know it disa er I think er it got away with er some old stuff you know .
5 Something to do with som something to do with a cotton mill in Paisley and it was s s s W I c just can nae recall what it was but it was a great big trial , there was a And er this this lawyer he had done quite well out of this case but it was a quite That must have been in er about nineteen twenty nineteen thirties about nineteen thirty two .
6 So we , we th that , that was er another good thing they , they got going but there was very little for , for nurses to do .
7 F*** this wanky shit we 've been doing . ' ’
8 so it 's er ninety nine pence yours , I do believe
9 They are erm it was er steak and kidney pie , brussels sprouts , carrots and bo plain boiled potatoes I could only eat about half the kidney and meat , I cou I could only eat about a third of the pastry , could n't cope with the carrots at all or the brussel sprouts , they were beautiful brussel sprouts like little cabbages , you know I could only eat a couple of them !
10 And this was a wonderful old grocery shop , er plain wooden floors you know , no tiles or anything like that , just the wood floors and I can see the barrels of apples and the barrels of this and then the oranges and the all the groceries and the bags of flour and the bags of sugar and and the and the grocer weighing the sugar up and all this sort of thing .
11 Now er first few days you 'd be feeling your feet of course , you 'd be playing all sorts of things , you know being free , er in the street , and all this sort of thing .
12 So three minutes , set the clock again as you did before and er one other thing I 'd like you to do is as you come up is do something that athletes do huh and that is to er give an affirmation .
13 she 's not going to this year , she 's erm , in Ruxley there , there was a little pot of seed that had been sowed and they were ready for pricking out , and er one little pot I think was ninety eight P , but there must of been fifty plants in there easily
14 Er twenty four address I suppose I 'd better put the house in there I bet I 'm not gon na get this finished in time now .
15 and the then there 's flanged they 're every six er every er twenty two feet I think it is .
16 but , it seems such a shame cos er big double gates you went in , you know , it was lovely , erm where did Keith go to school then ?
17 People moving in , this was in the medical practice , people moving in new er new er new first things you do is register with a doctor .
18 When you are actually sort of writing er , say if you are , when you are doing your project or doing your work it 's not just sufficient to say always T ratio is greater than two , therefore , it 's statistically significant , you must calculate the er correct critical value you use , right , for th for each T ratio and also if you are looking at any diagnostics or looking at the significance of the regression which is an F statistic right you must give the five percent or ten percent whichever you choose .
19 the six million erm U K pension cost is n't ongoing level and just going back to that er post-retirement medical benefits it would n't be material I mean definition material can be er something less than five percent of profits .
20 you know , it 's got to be three third , er thirty three percent you see
21 ‘ In today 's strange old world we have to face up to many unusual things . ’
22 At the Women 's Nutritional Advisory Service we conducted a survey to find out what people understood by the term " well balanced diet " .
23 I think Freud would say though however that these are more like the th the was talking about religion , now clearly if something is a outlawing it is n't gon na make much difference to it , or if anything it 's , it 's just gon na make it er , er make it more difficult , but there are certain types of religion and Judaism is one of them where th this very pattern you 're talking about did occur and here Freud is er probably standing on , on firm ground , for reasons which I 'll explain in my lectures I do n't wan na take up too much time , but I have done a bit of research on this myself and as you will see , erm there 's , there are good reasons for thinking that Freud was certainly right about some of those and we certainly know that a monotheistic and , and an absolutely rigidly monotheistic religion appeared in Ancient Egypt as erm Andrea said , just before erm the er reign of this heretic er heretic , heretic pharaoh one of whose er near descendants , I forget how he was related now , erm was originally called Tutamkhatan and then was forced to change his name to Tutankhamen and he was dug up by Howard Carter in nineteen twenty two or something er and er the Tutankhamen is called Tutankhamen and not Tutamkhatan is that there was a religious .
24 Second , despite the state 's vast law-enforcement apparatus it appears increasingly incapable of securing and maintaining for its citizens the wholesomeness and amenity of their physical environment , or even the long-term physical well-being of the citizens themselves .
25 Yet when I placed the first hot pad on to the boy 's twisted left leg he seemed not to feel any pain ; I supposed the pain of the spasms had made him impervious to a lesser pain .
26 At last year 's annual representative meeting we were informed by the chairman of the Junior Doctors Committee that he was engaged in secret talks with the chief medical officer on the future of training and specialist recognition , without the knowledge of the seniors .
27 Even lesser known men were received with open arms and , in some cases , cheque books : when the Rev. J. A. Macfadyen went to America to ‘ supply ’ the pulpit of Brooklyn 's Central Congregational Church he was offered a church in Chicago at the princely stipend of £2,000 — over £60,000 today — but he turned down the offer .
28 In Kee 's fine dark eyes he had read a call for help .
29 Given Shakespeare 's unlimited verbal energies it is no surprise to find him culling ingenuity from this idea of giving and receiving , as in the dazzling wit of 24 : ( I have italicized his in line 5 since it refers to the Poet ; his in line 8 since it refers to his bosom ; and They in line 14 as referring to his eyes . )
30 Fortunately for some in the audience the soppy songs in Benny Green 's reworking of George Bernard Shaw 's 100-year-old romantic comedy You Never Can Tell act as an anaesthetic and they are put out of their misery long before the interval .
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