Example sentences of "[pron] [noun] [prep] [adv] [prep] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | He says the Leeds course has broadened his horizons : ‘ We have people on my course from all over the world so the approach tends to be international . |
2 | He said , whereas my mum over there in the corner , he said , if she had a bash I had to listen to bloody Frank Sinatra , would n't I ? |
3 | Well actually people in my area do have a concern about this , also though I was brought up in my teens at least within a rural area and I know full well that to hold certain views even those of the majority within rural areas , are not necessarily easily expressed and I have today been told of yet another example of this being the case . |
4 | The Science and Engineering Research Council , which is providing the funds for the equipment , will coordinate a programme in which researchers from all over the country' will send specimens to the unit . |
5 | For although the two stood with their heads for once on a level pegging , the size of their shadows differed to no small degree . |
6 | She would spend all day with her daughter and then work on her designs until late in the evening . |
7 | The Owens have been told by surveyors that the road works could devalue their home by up to a hundred and fifty thousand pounds , and they think the department of Transport should listen to their arguments . |
8 | The proprietors of Elmfield House , Jim and Edith Lillie , were initially a little apprehensive about opening their much restored and much-cared for home to the public — but they soon came to appreciate the friendship and interest given to them by their visitors from all over the world . |
9 | Eleanor Thorne moved her head about uneasily on the pillow for a moment or two , wishing she had not complained about the soap , for now Alida might change the brand , keep that tablet to herself , And if it did not lather well , it had such a distinctive scent , a scent Eleanor liked . |
10 | ‘ There 's some more of her stuff through here in the living-room , ’ he called , beckoning from the end of the passage . |
11 | National newspapers cull their stories from all over the country — often , indeed , from all over the world . |
12 | It is thus appropriate that she should begin her enterprise in Out with an investigation of that originary metaphor described by Nietzsche , the act of perception . |
13 | To meet the growing demand for bigger and better bangs they import their fireworks from all over the world . |
14 | She had to put up her umbrella at once against the rain . |
15 | Undertakers would give the poor no credit and , whilst efforts were being made to raise cash , corpses remained on their deathbeds for up to a fortnight . |
16 | The high cheekbones , ’ he ran his finger from her chin to just below the eye . |
17 | In April , partly in response to Dell 's campaign , Compaq cut its prices by up to a third . |
18 | She kept her voice to just above a whisper . |
19 | Those who smoke could be cutting their fertility by up to a third . |
20 | Every sixth or seventh day or so , in the morning , as we prepare to sack out , and go through the stunned routines of miring , of mussing ( we derange each eyebrow with a fingerstroke against the grain ) , Tod and I can feel the dream just waiting to happen , gathering its energies from somewhere on the other side . |
21 | They 'll be forcing their way in here in a few minutes . |
22 | This nugget that I call ‘ I ’ would bullet its way in even on the music of the spheres . |
23 | Farmers may have to reduce their herds by up to a quarter if they want to save the country 's forest , the group says . |
24 | Some plants harbour their scent until late in the day , when it is released in abundance . |
25 | But a competition has taken place that proved them wrong.Teams from all over the country battled against the clock to change tyres at Silverstone race circuit . |
26 | No and you see it 's just them two I think they could put him sort of like in the hall and if there 's a |
27 | A sharp gust of wind set the whole tree in motion and he dung on desperately like a sailor in the rigging , remembering Dalziel 's jocular injunction to ‘ watch himself ’ . |
28 | ‘ We are not playing kick and rush , ’ he insisted when driving out to a friend 's hotel in the Derwent Valley below Consett , pausing now and then to savour the uncluttered Durham landscape , his heart for ever in the North-east of England . |
29 | were were saying that he was only God from his baptism to Not on the cross , before the cross . |
30 | He had worked at his books in here as a boy , shared port with Sir John as a stripling in his callow youth , sitting across from him before the fire in this male stronghold , deep in the leather chair . |