Example sentences of "[adv] [pron] [prep] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | If all were clear , undilemmatic and utterly consistent for the members of a society , there would be nothing for them to argue about , and thereby nothing about which to deliberate . |
2 | They 'll then pass the information on so that eventually everyone in the road knows . |
3 | Is it that the human being is secretly nothing without others ? |
4 | From now on everyone in the country will have the chance to recommend ‘ deserving cases ’ for an award . |
5 | What seems more difficult to find nowadays is genuine passion and thankfully no-one with the will to survive could ever describe Bitumen as wishy-washy . |
6 | well was it the diameter divided by the circumference or was it the other way round , and you right them on paper and C over D , D over C , does n't look any different , and you get locked into the problem and you just back off a bit and think of something real , like when you measured it |
7 | They must be mad to take on someone with her record . |
8 | Whilst it may be too much to ask that you immediately take on any responsibility for seeing that the 120,000 weekly NME s are properly recycled ( By heck , we are talking SERIOUS wank — ER ! — SW ) , you could perhaps act responsibly by doing your bit to ease unemployment by taking on someone with the job of disposing of your own rubbish soundly . |
9 | But he 'd take on someone like Glenda Grower , who 's a much tougher customer . |
10 | They may find someone to talk to , but rarely someone with whom they can actually cry although Damon Runyan claimed that the tears shed on Broadway by ‘ guys in love ’ , would produce enough salt water to start an opposition to the Atlantic and the Pacific . |
11 | He mused on how different his life would have been if he had met Viola when he was twenty-two , or rather someone like her , for she would not even have been a twinkle in her parents ' eyes at that stage . |
12 | But naturally everyone at Larksoken will find the news deeply shocking , the women particularly . |
13 | You dragged down everyone with you . |
14 | Oxford lost 3-1 at Luton and Hereford went down one-nil at home to Crewe |
15 | Its chief exports had been sponges and merchant seamen , and those brought in nothing in wartime . |
16 | Here Only me about me getting drunk , as if I would dear ! |
17 | ‘ The old woman who was the nurse died with only me in the room , ’ said Mrs Bumble . |
18 | Only me in the office . |
19 | When there 's only me in company that 's sober . |
20 | All you see over there , you never saw only them with , only them golden pheasants , that 's all I saw . |
21 | As more people choose to enjoy the horse for leisure and sporting activities , the British Equine Event will bring together everyone with a serious interest and involvement in horses . |
22 | As more people choose to enjoy the horse for leisure and sporting activities , the Event will bring together everyone with a serious interest and involvement in horses , and those with the land and resources who may wish to utilise them for a new equine business . |
23 | If we aggregate together everyone in that ‘ dependent ’ age group , i.e. , those below the age of 16 and above pensionable ages remembering the heaviest demands on services are made at each end of the age range , the percentage of dependants to total UK population has indeed remained remarkably stable throughout this century — 30 per cent in 1901 , 36 per cent in 1951 , 41 per cent in 1977 — and it is likely to remain so for the remainder of the century ; it is projected to be 40 per cent in 2001 ( Grundy , 1986 , p. 21 ; table 5.4 ) . |
24 | Out of the last discussion , titled The Merseyside Perspective , came the idea for a new umbrella organisation to bring together everyone in the business locally . |
25 | The organisation should bring together everyone from the musicians working at grassroots level to established businesses , and also involve decision-making bodies like Liverpool City Council and City Challenge . |
26 | If it 's been agreed that the treasurer spends £300 on publicity with £100 each for posters , leaflets and newspaper advertisements , he should be allowed the latitude to spend £150 on newspaper ads and £150 on leaflets if the publicity chairman thinks it necessary , and perhaps nothing on posters . |
27 | it 's got a load of rubbish on five , six and seven , there 's perhaps nothing on it , I 've just left it running |
28 | ‘ Perhaps nothing at all . |
29 | So nothing at Barnsley House is too grand … and the broader vistas are broken up by judicious planting of trees and shrubs.As for the flower borders … they owe more to the Victorian cottage than to the stately home : |
30 | So let so nothing in reality has changed , has it ? |