Example sentences of "[verb] [art] roof [prep] [pos pn] head " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 We try to tackle the problem at all ends — to prevent young people ending up on the streets , to provide a roof over their heads , and to search for long-term solutions .
2 People have spent years trying to clear their names after some trifling misdemeanour or insult and ended up having to sell the roof over their heads .
3 Making your fortune while you were asleep , just by getting into debt to own the roof over your head , was always to good to be true .
4 Like most British national trails , many continental distance routes assume that walkers are travelling light and seeking a roof over their heads each night .
5 Two , our institute has its own hall and as this is now about seventy years old and was not particularly well built in the first place , you will understand that it costs us a good deal in money and effort to literally keep the roof over our heads .
6 Well in one they 've got a roof over their head and in the other they have n't , I would 've thought that was a rather major difference .
7 Oh , I do n't matter — I 'm nothing , nobody , just the bloody fool who keeps a roof over your head — but I 'd have thought you 'd have the decency not to drag Tom into it … . ’
8 It should be housing designed to meet a social need , directed towards those with no other means , no other option of getting a roof over their head .
9 And if the recession continued much longer she might return to London to find herself looking for some other occupation to keep the roof over her head — but that was her secret .
10 Short commons , endless insecurity , real fear of losing the roof over their heads , and all the best men cropped — packed off to Botany Bay for poaching .
11 Without scruple politicians use fear as a persuasion weapon , targeting psychological needs : ‘ If you do n't vote for us you will lose freedom of choice/risk maltreatment under the NHS/deprive your children of good education/lessen the chance of losing the roof over your head . ’
12 I suppose , technically speaking , ’ he paused , ‘ if you put her out into the road she would have no roof over her head and we should have to take her in . ’
13 ‘ She 'll have a roof over her head as long as I 'm above ground , ’ he responded aggressively .
14 The Lord is my Warden ; I shall have a roof over my head .
15 It 's very difficult now with all the other cutbacks , I just do n't know how I 'm going to manage and whether or not I 'll have a roof over my head by the end of the year or what will be happening .
16 Whereas if you and I did n't have a roof over our head
17 " He did n't even have a roof over his head . "
18 Now Anne Henderson is going to court to try to keep a roof over her head .
19 Since nineteen eighty two when they took away the related earnings from the unemployment benefit they have introduced a further nine retrograde steps to the plight of the unemployed and now the proposals as has already been pointed out they now have a look , because there 's a fifty billion pound shortfall at how they can best tackle the sick and make them pay , as well as people who are struggling to keep a roof over their head .
20 The fact is I did take it out once or twice , determined to do something with it , but other things , like earning enough to keep a roof over our heads and send the children to decent schools , always seemed to intervene .
21 It 's impossible to start studying seriously until you 've found a roof over your head that suits your needs and allows a clear head for studying .
22 How it kept the roof over their heads as well as helping the community .
23 It 's one of the most basic needs we all have is to have a roof over our heads .
24 Finding a roof over your head has become a real problem for many more thousands of young people seeking a home of their own .
25 Bearing in mind that you 're rich enough to live in Surrey , and some people ca n't even afford a roof over their head do n't you think you have a moral obligation towards these people ?
26 The first night passed quietly enough as the newcomers were thoroughly examined and were glad to get a roof over their heads .
27 Vi had a roof over her head again , bed and board and two shillings a day pay , and , better than that , she had found someone to mother .
28 ‘ They got fed , ’ said Constance , ‘ and they had a roof over their heads .
29 We had enough , we had a roof over our heads and we had enough food and things like that , but nothing for luxuries or little extras .
30 Thanks to her I still had a roof over my head , but this economic patronage subtly altered relations between us in a way that did nothing to improve my self-respect .
  Next page