Example sentences of "[adj] [adv] [conj] [pron] [verb] the " in BNC.

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31 But I think he 's a bit worried I read into this that there 's a current there where you know the peasants are getting very radical , our is we ca n't be too radical and therefore we need to issue something which is gon na .
32 Make sure too that you have the answers to questions which may require actual information-this can be taken in note form .
33 But it 's confusing now because they put the news on and you can watch the evening news on the first feed at five o'clock in the afternoon now in San Francisco .
34 ‘ It 'll be safe enough if they sandbag the whole of the promenade , though , wo n't it ? ’
35 Actually I thought they were quite nice , but Gillian er made I Ian erm ring the short up cos she thought the legs were n't long enough .
36 Jason and I made a pact that we would n't discuss hairdressing at home unless we had to and we think that is even more important now that we have the baby .
37 Though the first state action came in 1882 with the Ancient Monuments Act , this was important chiefly because it acknowledged the interest of the state in the preservation of ancient monuments .
38 The view is more stunning yet if you take the trouble to climb up a little from the road , on to the grassy hill behind , so that you can see over the top of the slightly obtrusive forested spur to the south-west ; or if you follow the path through the woods to the south of the road for about half an hour you come out on a crest which dominates the country in the direction of the watershed .
39 I 'll take you there and I 'm sure someone will bring you back ’ She did n't want to say she was sure Beuno would bring her back because that would make it evident again that she knew the miserable secrets of Betty 's heart .
40 ‘ They 're probably jealous too because you got the job through your dad , and then you were offered the foreman 's job . ’
41 The engineer would have headphones on while Keith was blasting away ; he 'd move the mic around until we found the right place , then he 'd bolt it in the stand where the speaker 's sweet spot was , and there it would stay .
42 There is the Government 's view , which seems to see a large market as an end in itself , and there is the view expressed by my right hon. Friend , which sees a large market as successful only if it improves the quality of life of our citizens .
43 A magician lives in the house everyone says that he 's very grumpy so if you meet the magician you must be very polite .
44 Use of naturalistic information is wholly disallowed only if there can be some settlable choice of cognitive methods where all of our naturalistic information is available only if we resolve the choice in one of the possible ways .
45 THE leading yachts on the second leg of the Whitbread Round the World Race were almost in line abreast yesterday as they approached the finish at Fremantle .
46 THE leading yachts on the second leg of the Whitbread Round the World Race were almost in line abreast yesterday as they approached the finish here .
47 But there were also some very happy and amusing times , and I 'm so thankful now that we had the experience . ’
48 ‘ Well , if I am , Mrs Hamilton certainly must be , ’ she told him seriously , not wanting either of the doctors to see that she did indeed find the responsibility she was about to take on quite daunting now that she knew the full scope of Faye Hamilton 's problems .
49 But one is narrowly neutral even if one provides the Reds with normal food supplies .
50 When er I stood for the election of the national organizers for the East of Scotland and I was successful there and I left the Edinburgh branch in May nineteen sixty six to start work with the head office in nine May nineteen sixty six .
51 Was he right then when he told the people of Scotland , ’ Do n't vote for the proposals of the Labour party because they do not contain any responsibility for raising revenue .
52 It appeared just as impregnable yesterday as he survived the first two sets without being broken .
53 It was the loveliest day imaginable now that she knew the name of Angel 's foster parents .
54 On some days the smoke is so thick here that it obscures the sun .
55 Erm there 's the legendary Doctor Keat of Eton who er was was erm legendary precisely because he beat the boys so often and so vigorously .
56 ‘ Now , in Scotland , James 's widow Margaret , the mother of one infant , is pregnant again when she hears the news of her husband 's defeat and death .
57 The huge drops were so close together that they reflected the light , and the rain billowed and rippled like a silver-white curtain .
58 The precise details of the methods used by Murdoch to reform Fleet Street are not directly relevant here although they illustrate the bitterness and enmity that pervades the industry .
59 There may perhaps be properties which are evidence-transcendent , by which we mean that it is always possible that they be absent even though we have the best possible evidence of their presence .
60 The Histories is particularly relevant today because it represents the common discursive origin of historiography , sociology , anthropology , ethnography , and prose fiction .
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