Example sentences of "[pron] [pron] [verb] in [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ My nieces also tell me I live in the Mughal age , ’ he replied .
2 Yeah , I I mean I , or all I I went in a single shop .
3 I I feel in the early days the the social contract was n't particularly well known and I think our party initially felt that these things were better handled not though a proper set protocol in the Maastricht treaty .
4 I know of someone who took in an old lady and she turned out to be well-known for being difficult .
5 A similar gender difference was apparent in the time spent helping someone who lived in a separate household ; here 32 per cent of women but only 22 per cent of men spent ten hours or more each week on care-giving ( Green , 1988 , p. 21 ) .
6 Peter Ackroyd is all of the formidable pasticheur that he is praised for being , and Dyer 's tale , which affects to be that of someone who lived in the eighteenth century , and in which the element of imitation , present in writing of every kind , is more obtrusive than it is in the other tale , is the livelier of the two .
7 Business Traveller recently published a letter from someone who stayed in the Inter-Continental hotel in Kinshasa .
8 So perhaps you feel that while all this talk about kinship and affinity may make good sense in discussions of the social life of Australian Aborigines or of Trobriand Islanders in Melanesia , it really has very little relevance for ourselves who live in a social context in which , as a general rule , affinity is of little significance and the majority of social relationships outside the domestic family are coded in quite a different way .
9 It is possible for us to image a society of saints in which no one committed what we see as crimes , in which everyone behaved in an impeccable manner .
10 Perhaps these contradictory interpretations illustrate the dangers , to which I alluded in the earlier discussion , of assuming an automatic association between classicism and positivism and specific political ideologies .
11 This created two new corners , which I treated in the same way , and so on till I achieved the shape marked out .
12 The answers to these questions will be found in the analysis of cultural-ideological transnational practices and , in particular , the culture-ideology of consumerism in the Third World , to which I turn in the next chapter .
13 Such a concept clearly requires further exploration , which I attempt in the next chapter .
14 My husband was mad on golf , and he used to go down into the park and send golf balls onto the lawn and then walk back through the rose garden which I put in the wrong place .
15 All my possessions began to smell of smoke ; even my better clothes which I kept in a closed cupboard under the bunk .
16 The entire New Jersey garage movement which I documented in a 1988 issue of THE FACE was disco .
17 A coherent school policy on Standard English can be based on the different views of the main aims of English teaching which I listed in the previous chapter. :
18 But outside a religious context , why should I ask for a certainty with which I dispense in every other field of life ?
19 In terms of Julia Kristeva 's model , which I introduced in the last chapter , this would be a first stage , liberal equal-rights-and-opportunities response .
20 He also considered an argument based on freedom of speech , but rejected it for reasons which I consider in the next section of this judgment .
21 Have well considered questions ready for both types of interview which you ask in a logical sequence .
22 It 's been known for a very long time that from these cases you can isolate this organism C diphtheria bacterium which you saw in the practical classes and has this distinctive stayed property where er certain granules can be stayed up and also the arrangement of the cells is rather reminiscent of what called Chinese lettering .
23 ‘ There is n't the depth of strength which you find in the best labs in the States or in Japan .
24 The first time I visit the Ladies ' Pond , I exclaim to Kelly , ‘ It 's like a Fellini film , ’ to which she says in a lazy Scottish brogue , ‘ Perhaps …
25 She was always writing on little pieces of paper , which she kept in a locked drawer in her room , and every morning she got up surprisingly early to go down to the kitchen .
26 Her dark , grey-streaked hair , which she wore in a long bob , had been cut by Vidal Sassoon and she wore a beautifully tailored black suit relieved only by a little white flounce at the neckline .
27 Thus , the LAD needs to contribute enough ( but no more than enough ) innate knowledge for the child to learn the grammar of a language from the utterances which she hears in the first four or five years of life .
28 A dream in which she stood in a glorious , sweet-scented , flower-filled garden watching a tall , golden-haired man playing with beautiful blonde , blue-eyed children , all miniature replicas of himself .
29 Mrs Hill was a small , plump , middle-aged woman , with fine frizzy hair which she encased in a fine frizzy hair net ; she always wore a purple and blue flowered pinny , a garment more in keeping with an aunt or a cleaner than with a lover of science .
30 At that moment his secretary came into the room with two cups of coffee , which she distributed in a pregnant silence , shooting curious , covert glances at each of them .
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