Example sentences of "[pron] [noun] [modal v] [adv] [verb] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | That my affections should promiscuously Dart love and hate at once , both worthily ! ( ii.ii.189 — 95 ) |
2 | Some of my colleagues would gladly drive blindfold into a brick wall for this band , and while this collection hardly brings out the suicidal in me , I might be tempted to start coming along for the ride . |
3 | A further means of risk management is provided by the derivative markets in futures and options in which GEMMs can broadly offset spot positions by dealing in bond futures or options . |
4 | Men of the 16th ( Irish ) Division suffered similar losses in September 1916 , and their story will also form part of the exhibition . |
5 | It is a matter of concern to many librarians and researchers that some of these universities , such as Cambridge , hold numbers of high quality theses , containing unpublished work , to which researchers can only gain access by personally visiting the individual university libraries . |
6 | But their proposals would also require legislation to merge district health authorities and family health services authorities , which is not yet on the government 's agenda . |
7 | They must take a realistic view and look objectively when deciding which movements will best describe individuality . |
8 | She 's told him trying to get her back may only make life in Pakistan more difficult for her . |
9 | Their families will also find life very different and testing . |
10 | Research by Professor Quinn Mills , a US management expert at Harvard Business School , shows that organisations that unleash the creativity of their workforce can routinely achieve productivity gains of between 30% and 50% a year . |
11 | New rules forcing all unit trust companies to disclose clearly their charges would also increase competition on prices and — with the introduction of exit charges — encourage longer term saving rather than speculation . |
12 | In a society where poverty was regarded as the will of God , its relief could only bring grace . |
13 | But their interests should surely give way to the greater public good in enhancing confidence in the integrity and fairness of the capital markets . |
14 | Parents who recognize that they are out of their depth should always seek help . |
15 | The way in which she had dispatched her attacker would certainly make news . |
16 | This can be less stressful for the dog , because its stomach will probably contain food for a longer period . |
17 | For clubs in decent pitches though , offices or leisure complexes on part of their land can also provide cash . |
18 | She knew that the one thing that her mother would never provide money for was a training in medicine , so she wrote eventually to the Boys ' Own Paper to ask them how to go about it , inventing a letter that was supposed to come from a badly-off boy whom she thought would enlist their sympathy . |
19 | Systems such as CD-I , CDTV and their derivatives will also need modification in order to deliver both the appropriately encoded TV signals and the display quality that will be expected of them . |
20 | If it has grown to £447,000 then £300,000 is taxable on her death but if it falls to £247,000 her estate will only pay tax on £100,000 , assuming that the nil rate band did not change . |
21 | But if the animal cap is combined with the vegetal region some of its cells will now make muscle . |
22 | The pollution problems created in 1991 by the burning oil wells in Kuwait indicate the need for the United Nations to make deliberate large-scale devastation of the environment a ‘ war crime ’ for which victims could subsequently seek compensation and for which the perpetrators could be punished in the future . |
23 | The Burscough boss believes he can put his finger on why his side can consistently beat opposition from higher leagues , as they have done time after time in the past two years , yet struggle at their own level . |
24 | It was typical of him to find a place for Basil D'Oliveira in English cricket after the South African had written to him in desperation that his talent would ever find outlet . |
25 | General Ivanov , who commanded the Russian armies in the south , believed the Austrians would strike eastward , and that the northern armies of his group could then march south and take the invaders in rear . |
26 | 1 he student will then have time to act on the report , and the ward sister will then be able to evaluate the ward teaching and rectify omissions in the student 's experience . |
27 | But Roberts owns up that his book will probably lose money , because it does n't deal in big secrets , and says instead that there is no secret . |
28 | The Milan-born rider and his mount can then hold College Chapel 's expected late challenge . |
29 | The student who finds difficulty in writing out his results may equally use audio-recording as a tool , perhaps later transcribing his account into written form after he has formulated it . |
30 | If we ignored it others would simply follow suit . ’ |