Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb mod] [be] [adv] [noun prp] " in BNC.

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1 I must be there Shel .
2 But I could be both Verlaine and Rimbaud .
3 Course , you 'll be here Friday morning .
4 On arcade you can be either Guy you can be Guy and Codie and leave out Hagarth but most people go for Hagarth
5 They would n't have guessed , they could say we 'll be out Friday night !
6 Ian Clarke , a Bank of England executive , and his wife Jacqueline promptly turned back to Surrey so they would be nearer Heathrow and Gatwick airports — and better placed to take off for Australia .
7 Only that was nonsense , they would not be here , they would be wherever Randolph Henry Ash had put them , if they had ever been written .
8 As I entered , a man came out of a side room and I knew immediately he must be Long John .
9 I think it must be all Sarahs or what else or something , all Sarahs are registered as very intelligent
10 " I suppose it must be how Nick Faldo feels every other week … "
11 You have to put a book in first , that I was first to speak this morning , you were second and then it 'll be either Kelly Ann or Stephen next .
12 If I sent that today it 'd be there Wednesday morning would n't it ?
13 In the first case , either interpretation is fully acceptable — it can be either Farjeon or his style of undressing which has the quality of being clumsy ; and quite possibly the existence and use of such sentences provide the interpretative syntactic basis for the type which follows it , which therefore represents in a sense a second order of syntactic patterning .
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