Example sentences of "[pers pn] like [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Do I like curry ? she wants to know .
2 Do I like people ?
3 ‘ But do ye like Nellie ? ’ said the old man .
4 D' ya like Chris Box ?
5 D' ya like Mr .
6 So far as the malais were concerned , it also made them like Martinho more , in the political rather than personal sense .
7 Some of the characters that people produce from this and they did them like Parkinson did , a Rolling Stone ball J , but outlined in drop shadow .
8 Whereas Rolle 's poetic understanding of spiritual life embodied in his English works makes them like flares sent up to illuminate dark ground , each a light but each separate , Hilton 's Scale brings into the daylight a carefully worked out map of spiritual life with each of the major stages interconnected .
9 They 're watching me like hawks here .
10 He says er do you like hazelnuts ?
11 Do you like Mrs ?
12 Did you like Amy 's suit ?
13 Do you like neroli ?
14 Terry : Do you like Grange Hill [ a TV programme about a school ] ?
15 Would you like Lithuania to be part of some sort of erm , Soviet Federation , voluntarily I mean just some loose trading or defence partnership ?
16 Do n't you like gravy ?
17 Twelve of the forty interviews contained interesting contradictions between the overall assessments of satisfaction and answers to the direct question ‘ Do you like housework ? ’ asked in the early stages of the interview .
18 ( Do you like housework ? )
19 Answers to the question ‘ Do you like housework ? ’ are not evenly distributed between the two class groups , as Table 4.2 shows .
20 It would not be in order to list fully here Bernstein 's distinctions between the two codes ; however , one of these distinctions is of direct relevance to the question of social class differences in answers to the question ‘ Do you like housework ? ’
21 To summarize this part of the argument , it can be said that the contradictions found in these forty interviews between housework satisfaction patterns and answers to the question ‘ Do you like housework ? ’ may be interpreted as evidence of class-differentiated linguistic styles and norms of feminine domesticity .
22 As later chapters show , answers to the ‘ Do you like housework ? ’ question are also related to the kind of standards and routines adopted in housework , and to women 's self-concepts as expressed in a written statement .
23 Complaints about the label of ‘ just a housewife ’ are more common in the middle-class group , and attitudes to housework as revealed by the question ‘ Do you like housework ? ’ show a class-differentiated patterning .
24 In Chapter 4 the discrepancy between responses to the question ‘ Do you like housework ? ’ and the assessment of work satisfaction led to an explanation of these responses as ( in part ) expressive of norms to do with feminine domesticity and as indicative of two alternative approaches to housework : the search for satisfaction and the recognition of dissatisfaction .
25 If the explanation of a high standards and routines specification as symptomatic of the desire to be satisfied is correct , one would expect some relationship between this measure and answers to the ‘ Do you like housework ? ’ question .
26 In Chapter 4 social class differences in responses to the question ‘ Do you like housework ? ’ were noted .
27 Do you like Fawlty Towers David ?
28 I asked Ben if Lewis likes you and then , er all I got from his brother all the way home is do you like Lewis Jess ? ,
29 And , no , they had n't done anything racist up until then and I goes casually , do you like Bob Marley ?
30 Do you like painting people you know ?
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