Example sentences of "and [adj] [pron] [verb] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 That one goes red and that one stays white much longer .
2 Yet investigations of the writing process suggest that there is more than one way to salvation and that what suits one pupil may well hinder another — the protracted act of discovery and experiment that Thomas was engaged in with his piece of wood writings may well be a complete turn-off for another child .
3 So erm they used to put some meat by for her to er on the cheap sort of thing what was left over on a Saturday then my mother 'd get lots of meat and that you know cheap .
4 She could think of hundreds , no , thousands of replies just at this moment and each one had innumerable abusive words peppered throughout .
5 ‘ These new cluster rockets have a range of 30 to 40 miles , and each one has 90 small mines in it .
6 Now so what you 're going to do you work together but I would prefer you in twos and threes I think third person 's redundant .
7 On the one hand we 're really concerned about increase in violent crime er and we 've got to ask ourselves ‘ where did those people who are now in their late teens and twenties and thirties who commit those sort of crimes , where did they , where did it all begin from ? ’
8 Between 1795 and 1799 she learned Spanish , German , Arabic , Persian , Greek , Latin , Hebrew , some Syriac , and Erse as well as music , mathematics , and astronomy .
9 But the Christmas mummers remained — and some who read this will be able to recall them .
10 What remains the same is Rickenbacker 's liking for parallel neck depth , and this one measures more or less ″ from the first fret to the 17th .
11 The only other survivor from last year 's Glasgow team , Australian Mick Powell , is now in his fourth UK season and this one looks likely to be his best .
12 Well yes , but I mean it 's she seems to do the opposite thing to Charlotte , cos she used to sleep in the morning and fidget around in the afternoons and this one fidgets all morning and then sleeps in the afternoon .
13 I have an aversion to noisy cameras , and this one rings several decibels before it 's done with selecting and focusing the lens , and winding on the film .
14 If you have a pre he 's actually said to me if you have a problem I will listen and I will help you , so there 's me going to him and saying look due to a misunderstanding I have a problem and this one saying tough
15 The merits contained in any Williams novel — and this one has many — are not purely literary .
16 This means that British Coal has to shut down a large amount of its production capacity , and this they attempted last autumn .
17 He believed his son disliked him and this he thought outrageous .
18 They were reminiscing over the times they had worked together , and this she found irritating .
19 the ‘ fiction theory ’ must remain unsatisfactory unless it can explain what are the real facts in terms of individual rights and duties which underlie the fiction , and this it seems unable to do .
20 Between 1783 and 1793 wheat had averaged 47s ( £2.35 ) a quarter ; between 1793 and 1801 it averaged 77s ( £3.85 ) and from 1803 to 1813 92s ( £4.60 ) .
21 Between 1378 and 1407 he enjoyed thirty-five benefices ( although never more than twelve at once ) .
22 During 1971 and 1972 he surveyed four oil refineries — two each in France and Britain — interviewing a total of over 800 workers .
23 The fifth , René Lévesque , likewise recognized for his visionary leadership , was the premier of Quebec between 1976 and 1985 who brought that province to the brink of separation from the rest of Canada .
24 In the first year , students take one unit which examines contemporary issues in development , and another which studies recent developments in Geography .
25 And miraculously , too , a dish of sandwiches had appeared and another one piled high with disgraceful-looking cakes .
26 And another one makes three .
27 He uses the metaphor of the commercial viability of two watchmakers , one of whom puts watches together out of finished sub-assemblies which can not fall apart , and another who assembles each watch from its basic parts and risks the whole thing falling to pieces if dropped .
28 She was able to chat to Ana for most of the meal and what with one thing and another she felt some progress had been made , though what she was doing in this situation she did not know .
29 Between 1616 and 1629 she bore eight children , and with her husband was active in a Shrewsbury conventicle .
30 In this poem , as in 85 , the Poet claims that his Muse is ‘ tongue-tied ’ ; in 76 , 102 , 103 and 105 he gives conflicting reasons , all ingenious , why he writes such repetitive or uninspired poetry .
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