Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] and [pers pn] [modal v] " in BNC.

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1 The highest type of firework last year if it was specified was the sparkler remarkably enough and we would make this point very seriously that parents tend to give children sm very small children sparklers and they must remember tha that these things are fireworks they are dangerous they do get red hot er they must supervise them at all times when they give them sparklers cos they may wave them around they may se set somebody else 's clothing on fire with them they may get the sparks in their eyes if they get too close to them er and one particular danger of course is that they they may get hold of en the hot end when the firework has finally extinguished and they think it 's all finished with .
2 And then the old keeper used to come round and see that we were all right and they 'd be there till the following day and carry on for about three or four weeks you see .
3 And of course she 'll say it 's all right and she 'll manage but she 's just being brave . ’
4 Dear God , make everything all right and I 'll always be nice to people , even May and Izzy .
5 I told my father I was all right and I 'd be in for my dinner in an hour or so , then went back to the shed to wipe Gravel down .
6 Now the District Council is thinking in terms of this as a reason why perhaps sixty ac sixty hectares may not be entirely enough and we should seek to compensate for transfers out of industrial land .
7 ‘ Play Cliff long enough and it will see the error of its way and shoot off to church .
8 ‘ Stay here for long enough and you 'll soon learn , ’ Lucy assured her while containing her amusement with difficulty .
9 A pier is a disappointed bridge ; yet stare at it for long enough and you can dream it to the other side of the Channel .
10 But the man at the front had n't been told this of course , naturally enough and he could n't see that so suddenly with a jolt the wardrobe left him , two steps ' worth instead of one at a time .
11 ‘ We 'll get inside somehow and we 'll find the — the person who was captured and be out again before you know it ! ’
12 He poured himself more whisky , pressing Herr Nordern to have another , too , and saying that he was leading the Norderns into bad ways but that they must forgive him as it was n't very often they saw him , ha ! ha ! and Herr Nordern , while not prepared to accept that he was led by anyone except the leaders of his country , took the whisky , thinking , what the devil , he had worked like a dog all day , and it was true , Karl would not be with them much longer and they would probably never see him again and , he had to confess , he would n't mind if he never saw him again as long as either of them lived .
13 I shall not be with you much longer and I may well not see Italy again . ’
14 Stay here much longer and you 'll go where you do n't need luggage !
15 My Lord erm just to sweep up one or two of the other , very briefly the points my learned friend has just raised , erm I , I think it follows that our provisional position at the moment is that we think that reference is probably more satisfactory than simply going to the commission , what went , if your Lordship went to the commission and then found that they were unsatisfactory or did n't really take matters further , for one of the reasons it might very well not , is because the original complaint put to the commission was not framed in the same way as the defence and counterclaim are now framed , er there 's been a very considerable amount of refinement , both parties would no doubt wish to put submissions into the commission as to how the answer should be put or to provide information so the commission can answer them and so on and so forth and it may not be any quicker doing it that way
16 It is difficult to think that Parliament intended the section to operate so capriciously and I would not construe it in that sense unless clearly constrained to do so by the statutory language .
17 Because if not , you 'd better say so now and I 'll go away and never bother you again .
18 it has worked extremely well and you can all even see ca n't you
19 but that 's , would n't affect me because I 'll be taking loans out so there and I can have up to twenty er partners , nineteen in fact , because there 's twenty partners altogether , basically , so there is definitely benefits for being in partnership
20 Arrange the right papers for me at the Legation , travelling money and so on and I 'll come the low-risk way by rail .
21 Get into a jam with , for example , a knot in the yarn , bad knitting and so on and you will be in real trouble .
22 Except as , when the two individuals get together again and they may choose to marry .
23 Much closer and she 'll melt her glasses , I thought .
24 ‘ He 's done it brilliantly again and he 'll be better for that race I can tell you , ’ he said .
25 It must be for the local authorities , which have the statutory responsibilities , to take those responsibilities extremely seriously and I would not want to divorce them from the primary responsibility for undertaking those tasks .
26 ‘ If they see us , they 'll clobber us right away and you 'll never be able to warn your dad . ’
27 In the French class nowadays the important thing is to SPEAK French — the sound of your voice in French may seem strange to you at first but you have a go right away and you will see what fun it can be .
28 A little longer and I would have had some difficulty . ’
29 The erm the the crusher , the hopper was fixed underneath the granary and then there 'd be a little trap-door in the floor or a granary , right above and you could er shovel the the corn , the oats down into .
30 The sun is shining , it 's a beautiful day , we 'll throw our sandwiches discreetly away and I shall take you to lunch at the Lur Inn . ’
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