Example sentences of "[verb] [prep] [pron] [prep] the [det] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Here , ’ she says thickly , handing me a joint while she rolls the ice cube round in her mouth and tries to breathe through it at the same time .
2 Zach told her his age , which was nine , and spelt out his name , apologizing for it at the same time .
3 I was put to work with him on the same bench and he not only taught me toolmaking , he also taught me about the trade union movement and the kind of society he wanted to see . ’
4 Paul had reasons for the private emptying of his ; he was still treating himself with a solution of the doctor 's recommended potassium permanganate crystals , and had to make his exit quickly when Willie was out of the room , as that gregarious gentleman would have come with him on the same errand ; then hurry outside with the tell-tale purple contents , empty them , rinse the pot at the pump , and come back .
5 to remember that teenagers normally go through the phase of being attracted to someone of the same sex .
6 After some thought he said ; ‘ Well , I have a daughter your age , and if she were to come to me with the same question I would advise her to terminate . ’
7 Her instinct is to relate to everyone in the same way .
8 These ledgers can be easily subdivided , enabling several clerks to work on them at the same time and it is also easier to withdraw old accounts and insert new ones in their place .
9 Kypov shouted at him across the few metres that separated them , and the breath spouted white from the Major 's mouth .
10 Around 1.7 million of these were looking after someone in the same household ; 1.4 million were providing help or supervision for at least twenty hours a week ; and 3.7 million were carrying the main responsibility for providing that help ( Green , 1988 ) .
11 I turned back to find Yvonne 's grinning face looking past me in the same direction .
12 She stared at the book-filled wall above the desk , then turned back , seeing how he was looking past her at the same spot .
13 ‘ I do n't know how you can even speak of her in the same breath . ’
14 So far , we have argued that people in modern Britain give great importance to their immediate family , that is their husband or wife and children living with them in the same house .
15 In the absence of an analysis of heterosexism , heterosexuals can ( and do ) reduce our gayness or lesbianism to just living with someone of the same sex , thus enabling them to remove the possibility of challenge from our relationships with them .
16 I move away as I would prefer to talk with someone from the same planet .
17 But by 1937 , J. C. Pringle , the head of the Charity Organisation Society ( COS ) , was prepared to admit that married women 's paid employment did not necessarily have an adverse effect on the family economy , something that ‘ could not have been said with anything like the same confidence 25 years ago ’ .
18 The issue is even more complicated in the world of sound recording , because we can not pick up a record and listen to it in the same way that we can pick up a book and read it .
19 Leon Kennedy slumped in his chair , laughing , and it came to him with the same elegance as movement .
20 you might be able to do it off that , you wo n't be able to listen to it at the same time
21 you 're not looking at it in the same way at all .
22 It may therefore be necessary to proceed against him under the latter section , supposing that the requisite intention can be established , or under section 5 .
23 Again in the 45–60 age group , noticeably higher proportions of unmarried women were caring for someone in the same household , were the main carers of their disabled relatives and friends , and were caring for over twenty hours a week than were either their married or male counterparts ( Green , 1988 , pp. 9–10 ) .
24 But I think there 's also the other end of the scale which is , which is what , you 've slightly amended this year , is the fact of elderly people erm , I know recently that myself have gone through the fact of my gran had er , was going through a very sick period , and if she 'd have come back home , it would have been very difficult for me to have had to look after her at the same time as trying to attend my council duties , and this would have been the same for my dad , and the additional income which this would have brought , to have paid someone to be able to look after her whilst we were at council meetings , and you can remember that these meetings sometimes go on , you can say well , this meeting should be over by one o'clock then it goes on till three o'clock or whatever , and then peop , the problems mount up for that person left on their own , and I think that those things have to be taken into consideration , and I believe that this is the first step forward in trying to recognise that people have responsibilities outside of the council chamber .
25 I would love to hear from anyone in the same situation .
26 Look on it in the same way as the treads on your bike or car tyres .
27 Exactly the same thing happened to me at the same stage when I was pregnant . ’
28 No one mentioned it was essential training as a motoring correspondent to have a car crash , but it happened to me in the same gruesome circumstances that confront hundreds of motorists every week .
29 Surely a man of the cloth would n't look at her with the same sort of craving as James Halden .
30 So I mean I suppose they 'll look at it in the same kind of way , somebody who 's got managerial , management qualities rather than I suppose people who are interested in the other side of it , the medical side of it , probably , really be geared up to organizing the money side of it would n't they , usually one or the other .
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