Example sentences of "[conj] [adv] [pron] [verb] [pron] the " in BNC.

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1 That might in itself imply that she felt for some reason that she would be suspected , or perhaps she knew who the killer was and preferred to keep quiet .
2 The fact remains that not everyone does it the same way .
3 And having my kind of build , being quite big and wearing miniskirts , I know that sometimes it gets me the wrong kind of attention from boys only interested in physical relationships .
4 y y i it can happen and apparently sometimes does that the young man will receive a recycled wife who is in fact the mother of a daughter who has married his father and so he calls her the daughter-mother , her actual mother is his wife .
5 And so I told her the whole story of my lonely childhood with the Reed family , and of my terrible experience in the red room .
6 Well , obviously none of us would want to separate sex from erotica , and so er , and I think we , what we 'd like , what we wanted the leaflet to do was put , put sort of sex for , for young people er and students in particular in this case into a framework that allowed loving and resp , response of attitudes and , and eroticism , yes , and so I think what the leaflet does is , is let people take care of themselves sexually and let them take responsibility for their sexual acts .
7 But these men could do much more to help , not only their partners , but themselves , if only they understood what the menopause is and what can be done to alleviate the problems .
8 We could really make this place swing if only they gave us the data to work on , could n't we ? ’
9 And lastly he showed them the stars and the clouds and the moon and all the winds of heaven .
10 And apparently she phoned her the other night at half past twelve and said can you come and pick me up ? said no .
11 I could see that he was rather cross with me , and soon he told me the reason .
12 And then when he 'd won he offered Heseltine the had of friendship and promptly he gave him the Poll Tax , which will finish him for ever .
13 When we think about those questions of individ individuation in our normal affairs , the best we can do is to say that what individuates us and also what makes us the same person through changes over time , is a great medley of factors , some of which are bodily , some of which involve our souls
14 There was an offer in the letter if my memory 's correct but it did n't actually specify what their offer was and really I think what the Council want to do is exactly what they are offering because we have to be minded all the time that the that er applicant does not own all the land and , and certainly it is , is , is the wish I think of this Council , I believe unanimously , and , and I think a lot of the residents , that we do somehow acquire a pedestrian link .
15 AND NOW WE OFFER YOU THE CHOICE …
16 And now we Offer You the Choice …
17 AND NOW WE OFFER YOU THE CHOICE …
18 AND NOW WE OFFER YOU THE CHOICE …
19 And now he finds himself the man who carries the main hopes of millions of GP crazy Spanish fans .
20 Battle is joined again , and surely we know what the result will be .
21 thought he 'd cut and things like this and then they showed you the chap the next day and he was completely different !
22 And then she realised what the porter was really asking her .
23 ‘ A female Solomon , ’ said Neil , sighing , and then he gave her the most charming grin , and through the ruin of his face she suddenly saw what Matey must have known — the handsome soldier-boy he had once been .
24 And then he gave us the will and the other papers and he said to us , just before we toddled off to Morocco — ’
25 shows you a little tiny picture of the calculator and when you press one button it presses the button on the thing and then he showed me the clock
26 but I mean you send the package out and you get a phone call er it 's Mr Davies , and then you get card out and then you send him the questionnaire it 's merely a record duplicated on the form but
27 And then I saw her the next day and and then I realized the and then I came back home and I told her why does n't she see there 's something changed .
28 Yes we had er ships wh we , they call erm these liberty ships come in from America loaded with bombs and when they moved them up there , well they call them down here they call them liberty ships and er the bombs were loaded , so they used to erm put all timber between each layer of bombs and they had proper carpenters who would fix all these and when the dockers went down , they put these bombs out , cos they were n't detonated , the detonators were in the fore end of the ship , right down the lower hull and erm the bombs were loaded into open trucks loaded into , well the dockers they thought it was dangerous , cos we had the Fire Brigade , that 's the fire service down there and standing by with the fire engines and dockers they wanted the , they want a shilling , I think it was a shilling a day extra , well a shilling extra something like that and there they got it the shilling or extra pound , cos us crane drivers we were n't on the same par as them , so we asked for a shilling .
29 There was no pain and yet there seemed something the matter with each part .
30 But as , as I say it was a job at that time and and in fact I 'd never , this was the only factory I had n't fancied , working in was the B M K , and yet I like it the best .
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