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

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1 It will only be when you see the results of your actions that you realize how effective they have been .
2 And the net result of all of these things together is that it narrowed the cost value differentials between U K and overseas holidays .
3 The only conditions the Taxman lays down is that you give the same amount regularly for at least four years and that you are a UK taxpayer .
4 So the easiest thing really is obviously is if I get the thing sorted out and then , turn it
5 The reason why these had survived so long was because they required the most money spent on them — in the case of valley bottoms , to pay for initial drainage and then to maintain it — to make them yield their full potential of arable and pasture .
6 She and this animal treated each other with mutual contempt , like an old unhappily married couple , and I always thought that the only reason he did n't bite her or she have him put down was that they disliked the rest of the world even more than each other and would have been even more miserable and lonely than they were in their trap of hostility .
7 ‘ For the railway monopolies , it has always been that they wanted the data network modernised .
8 Has my right honourable friend had an opportunity to see the report from three I s , investors in industry , in which they have surveyed five hundred of the companies in which they invest and the confidence factor of those businesses is higher now than it 's ever been since they started the surveys in nineteen eighty eight .
9 In this case it would possibly be that they had the name of the subscriber but …
10 The problem with modernity , Enlightenment man 's home is that it masks the reality of his hopelessness from him .
11 The result will often be that he wins the race .
12 What we will say , if we keep clearly in mind that everything might have been the same up to the instant when the bar came out , and no bar might have come out is that nothing caused the bar to come out .
13 Secondly , he was a glaciologist and it may well be that he persuaded the pilot to swin' away to the east .
14 It may well be that he took the place of Thomas Hitchcock who had been apprenticed to the same master nine years previously .
15 ‘ But if I take the job , ’ she blurted , goaded by the idea that he found her lack of sophistication amusing , ‘ it wo n't be because I like the house .
16 The other issue arising here is whether you take the cost of the chairs out of the asset account and show them as an expense each time a sale is made or whether this is done at the end of the month .
17 because I do n't speak to at all now and that ca n't be right and the reason I do n't is because I know the response I 'm gon na get , blank look
18 Certainly the reputation of the outer office then was that it conspired the way other offices make tea .
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