Example sentences of "[pron] [be] [adv] [adv] [verb] [subord] " in BNC.
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1 | Indeed I am always immensely flattered when somebody a long way down our hierarchy rings me up and asks me to do something which they believe I am in a particularly good position to do . |
2 | ‘ I 'm definitely less stressed because I do n't have to do the four things I was no good at — timesheets , billing , chasing debtors and doing my expenses ! ’ |
3 | I 'm much better looking than that . ’ |
4 | I 'm really well adjusted so I can let it all hang out . |
5 | Now , the other two subjects I 'm really only dealing because the people responsible are , are not here in the flesh this afternoon but Alyd the provincial advocate and I I think of Bill that 's also gone too , er yes he he has , he has had to leave this afternoon . |
6 | Well , well I was just maybe wondering whether you might use a part of that to support the new cabinet |
7 | I was really deeply moved as I had only seen such a thing before in religious pictures . |
8 | It has been suggested that non-cognitive theories of ethics do best with those ethical words such as ‘ good ’ and ‘ ought ’ which are most plausibly represented as purely valuational , while cognitivist theories ( which take moral knowledge and truth seriously ) do best with words such as ‘ brave ’ ’ loyal' and so forth ( LOVIBOND ) . |
9 | Here we report initial 187 Os/ 188 Os ratios for 190-Myr-old picrite basalts from the Nuanetsi region of the Karoo flood basalt province , which are most readily explained as mixtures between enriched SCLM and sub-lithospheric material , most probably derived from a mantle plume . |
10 | Chemists have begun to develop models for these processes and for the formation of other compounds using soluble metal compounds which are more easily studied than catalyst surfaces . |
11 | These may often take the form of rhymes , which are more easily remembered than bare facts . |
12 | I ) is composed of a series of segments which are more equally developed than in the other regions of the body ( Matsuda , 1975 ) . |
13 | It would also need to embrace countries like Nigeria , which are still unrealistically classed as middle-income and therefore not eligible for Paris-club relief . |
14 | These are the widespread fictions or myths about the language , some of which are so universally accepted as to be pedagogical orthodoxy . |
15 | The consequence of this has been the incorporation into the political sphere of issues which were previously barely regarded as political at all . |
16 | As we have seen , the decisions of the Roman Council of 1059 , which were more widely distributed than almost any others in the century , never mentioned the decision about the Eucharist . |
17 | It is a word which is mostly only used when we discuss Hitler 's treatment of the Jews or when we consider Cambodia . |
18 | A further concept was that of the Ka , which was inherent in gods , kings and men and which is perhaps best translated as meaning the life-force . |
19 | This has been the basis of destructive neurosurgery for pain which is now largely abandoned because the pain recurs after some time . |
20 | The overall effect is to produce speech which is less richly organised than written language , containing less densely packed information , but containing more interactive markers and planning ‘ fillers ’ . |
21 | The Prince was more than keen to help ; as a result of that approach he convened a meeting , known as the Windsor Conference , which is still widely regarded as one of the most significant advances ever made in race relations . |
22 | If you venture past the crowds to see the Poussins , you find yourself alone with a collection which is as lamentably hung as ever . |
23 | Moreover , certainty of precedent , while in general most desirable , is not of as great an importance in relation to a doctrine which is as infrequently invoked as this . |
24 | Thirdly , at a higher level still , we can see the dynamic between thought which is rule-governed and thought which is far less bounded where different forms of reason collide . |
25 | Juno Boyle ( Angela McKeever ) gave a portrayal which was generally well realised though it lacked a suggestion of ‘ steel ’ to be found in Juno . |
26 | As a result , the small British army had a high degree of expertise in irregular and colonial warfare , could be deployed easily over great distances by sea , and had a rank-and-file which was possibly better trained than that of any other great power . |
27 | Well , I think it 's , it 's largely to do with the changed uses of the living room , because I think one of the , one of the changes that I found in , in the way that people organise the rooms within their house , is changing over from having a best parlour , usually in the front , which was very seldom used except for inviting the vicar in or whatever , or laying out the dead , combined with a back kitchen , a family room , where you ate and so on , and a move over to having one combined living-dining room where all the family 's activities went on . |
28 | Once arrived , the guests found themselves , for most of the time at least , caught up in a ritual of entertainment which was so smoothly organized as to be unnoticeable and , given the Empress 's indefatigable energy , so tiring as to eliminate any possibility of boredom . |
29 | For example , many warewashers require very little product expertise to run on a day-to-day basis and can thus be operated by general kitchen staff , who are traditionally lower paid than skilled workers . |
30 | But none are more deeply affected than the PSI , which Craxi had headed since 1976 . |