Example sentences of "[pron] [adv] [vb past] [prep] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 All of them eventually died of cardiac failure without the return to normal bowel function .
2 Nothing apparently happened for two months after the Institute 's delegation .
3 I rarely got beyond this point in my sales patter before expressions of incredulity replaced polite interest .
4 In February 1940 at the Labour Exchange at Devizes , I duly registered for military service .
5 I naturally came to this conclusion only with the greatest reluctance ; it was no easy matter for me , the responsible commander , to abandon my dreams of hope and victory !
6 I personally spoke at countless gatherings , from twenty suited businessmen at their weekly lunch to 200 noisy schoolchildren packed in a hall .
7 In all I think I only insisted on one cut to anything he did , and that was the fight between the two cavemen in the first story which ended with one of them smashing a rock down on the other 's head .
8 So that was my life , I only had about two years in
9 I was n't there very long cos I only went in one class in Road School .
10 I only put on ten pounds — in fact I did look rather skinny amongst all the other opera singers .
11 I mean the only country I spent a lot of time in , in , in Europe is Austria , and then I only stopped in remote villages , you know , more or less , so er , I mean they rely on eh , tourist trade , they rely on tourist trade , where , where I 've
12 And I suddenly realized at this stage that there was going to be something rather unexpected happening .
13 I just went past these fellows and one of them shouted , ‘ Hey , speccy four-eyes , ’ and I ignored them like you told me and then they came and took them off and stamped on them . ’
14 I just looked at this piece of paper in horror and was pounced on .
15 Also I just played on six tunes on Bruce Hornsby 's new record , with Bonnie Raitt and Phil Collins .
16 Actually just just quickly er I just noticed on that list of your questionnaires that we got back a couple that they did n't actually know what was going on .
17 She has never possessed boots or winter shoes : " I ca n't afford closed-in shoes , so I always wear sandals and in the winter I just put on two pairs of socks . "
18 ‘ Oh , I just bumped into some people , who knew some people … .
19 I just mentioned with that microphone .
20 I just stood on three bits when I come in .
21 I finally spent about 20 minutes just enjoying the VFR day , pottering round within sight of Breighton at about 1000 ft and occasionally putting the Aeronca into a tight turn over a copse , or a particular field , just for the sheer exhilaration of flying this aerial Citroen 2CV .
22 Sadie and I gradually learnt about each other .
23 One leads up an unfrequented glen occupied by wild goats and skirts the northern flank of Beinn Fhada to arrive at a rough bealach or col , where I once shivered for two hours waiting for the mist to lift off Sgurr nan Ceathreamhnan ahead , which it did not .
24 In an attempt to solve this problem , I have used the experience gained from an analysis I once made of some Playschool programmes on BBC2 , and brought along some assistance , in the form of Big Ted and Little Ted , who will play the two speaker roles , and to whom I shall give an oral and a nasal voice respectively .
25 ‘ The closest I ever got to any man was when I had him in the sights of the rifle and I never missed . ’
26 He was the first guy I ever saw in military clothes before the main craze for the mods dressing up in military uniforms went on .
27 I want to forget all I ever knew about precious Miguelito . ’
28 My mother , too , was a science teacher and I was good at science , and I always continued with that line because partly of the family background and partly of my own interests .
29 In his ‘ A Study of English poetry ’ , which ran in The English Review from March to June 1912 , Newbolt refers to Pound as ‘ a critic , who is himself a poet , and whom I always read with great interest ’ .
30 In the Poetry Review for February , 1912 , a critic , who is himself a poet , and whom I always read with great interest , speaks of the struggle ‘ to find out what has been done , once and for all , better than it can ever be done again , and to find out what remains for us to do ’ … .
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