Example sentences of "[noun] [conj] [pers pn] [am/are] live [prep] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ This is not London , you know , and the local girls are happy-go-lucky , so the relationships when you 're living in the same house tend to be even more happy-go-lucky . ’
2 I think that we must all be full of the sense or profound thankfulness that we are living in this country , under a system of National Government … .
3 Here you are , about to be launched in your own right as a successful couturière and I 'm living in a country thousands of miles away , helping to manage a thoroughbred farm . ’
4 What is more or less manageable on an average wage , like paying the TV licence or buying shoes , causes a major cash flow crisis when you 're living on supplementary benefit .
5 To crown it all , I now read in my newspaper that we are living in ‘ the post-feminist era ’ which I take to mean either that the battle is won — a view informed by the same kind of stupidity which once encouraged Macmillan to proclaim ‘ we 're all middle-class now ’ — or that feminism is a spent force and has slipped back into obscurity for another sixty years of oblivion .
6 Initially he is overwhelmed : ‘ I continue to have this curious sense of fiction , the feeling that I am living in a Maurice Edelman novel .
7 In the first place , as the title makes plain , if offers a searching criticism of the claim that we are living in a postmodern epoch , and the consequence of that claim , that the culture and politics appropriate to such an epoch are structurally different from those of the preceding — and now past — Modern one .
8 Erm because erm she started Wednesday but they 're living at Stanborough
9 So consequently she 's living in Bay and I 'm living on my own in up in Holyhead .
10 Part of the reason that they 're living on the streets is because of the financing of a foreign debt .
11 And another thing if you 're living with somebody and , and you 're both unemployed .
12 You 're classed , you 're classed as a reject sort of thing cos you 're living in these flats .
13 We have all heard the tedious cliché that we are living in an Information Society .
14 Most people are accustomed to follow linguistic rules more or less slavishly , but in this case they would be glad to change if only someone gave them a new set of clear rules to follow ( an earlier work by Miller and Swift was subtitled ‘ New Language in New Times ’ : it seems they take the optimistic view that we are living in a postfeminist world ) .
15 I wake up like it , I go to bed like it , I 've got it all the time that I 'm living with a bloody nightmare , all the time .
16 Another clue comes from a paper by the Japanese psychiatrist Abe who has shown that the second twin is far more likely to develop the disease if they are living with an affected twin around the time of onset , as compared to the concordance rates for twins who are living apart .
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