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

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1 I ai n't no building them just to get all out and up done , I mean the programme now looks crowded , but when you look at the new programme it 's just full , there 's nowhere else and no more room in them boxes to write my instead of one every two , three months , there 's four and five every month starts something
2 Theyspoketo them nicely but if I asked them for anything it was as though they could n't be bothered .
3 If they like sentence me straight away for doing something like I 'd think to myself is it worth it ?
4 Last March , in common with many other small businesses , the Russells needed extra funds to tide them over a difficult period .
5 This includes those who are temporarily between jobs and drawing unemployment benefit to tide them over until the new job is taken up .
6 And , as Appendix III shows , there 's the additional incentive , for many people , in keeping in with Mr Jones in case times get hard and they have to appeal to him for a loan to tide them over .
7 I can do nothing to help except give them good references and a few quid to tide them over .
8 Her husband had opened a bookshop to support her and their two children , but it was " imperative for her to work " at her old job as reader , " to tide them over for a year or two " .
9 And er to try and tide them over .
10 Erm to keep them to tide them over .
11 I mean the only thing that an appeal fund like that should do is to give the widows and dependents of the the dead of the platform , it should give them immediate money to tide them over until they get their compensation which they need .
12 Staff here are desperate for donations of both food and money to tide them over until the recession ends .
13 For example , during a recession , a large firm will commit itself to its suppliers and subcontractors for continued orders to tide them over .
14 If you lend me some to tide me over . ’
15 I was between jobs , and I actually had enough to tide me over while I had a sabbatical .
16 I went to the National Gallery and offered to sell the two Paul Klees I had carried with me , to tide me over .
17 I will have wages to tide me over initially . ’
18 A little to tide me over , I gather . ’
19 It would n't be much , but would maybe tide me over till I could find something better .
20 Meeting Jack in his butch horn-rims gave me a feeling of intense familiarity and the first time we banged glasses together in mid-kiss I just knew it was sight at first love .
21 ‘ Father , ’ said Tutilo , burning into startling whiteness , ‘ I pledge you my faith I never did nor never would have done him any harm , nor do I know of any who might need to wish him ill .
22 It 's a trick I never learnt .
23 He was receding a bit , and ‘ with long hair I always looked pretty and I do n't like being pretty — I wanted a bit more of a hard image ’ .
24 And it 's too late to put together the story I really wanted to do this week .
25 I was so deep in the story I never noticed . ’
26 Perhaps the best way to write this kind of story ( or even the equivalent of the detective novel at short story length ) is to do as I did with the first crime short story I ever wrote .
27 ‘ That 's the sweetest story I ever heard , ’ Zeke says .
28 Its entrance was discovered in 1950 and two years later this deepest of all gouffres acquired a sad celebrity with the death there of Marcel Loubens , a Belgian speleologist , who was badly injured deep underground but could not be got to the surface quickly enough to save his life , a story I dimly remember reading at the time in newspapers .
29 ‘ It 's not just the football , it 's a nice town and it 's a nice day out ; if we went out of existence I just would n't know where to turn .
30 Well according to the er Express I just had a look at , they reckon it 's on but for about half the original sum .
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