Example sentences of "[modal v] [adv] [verb] [adv prt] in the " in BNC.
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1 | But a more novel objection came from Dr Leonard Wilson , when Bishop of Birmingham , and who opened a school without wearing gaiters as a form of protest because he believed : ‘ Bishops should not dress up in the way of the decadent eighteenth century . ’ |
2 | But you must n't hang about in the morning then , neither ! |
3 | Very pleased to have yours and as I said in my last it 's your money , God has been very kind to you and you must n't fly up in the face of his kindness and I wish you had not taken this step , your Uncle Steve says property 's more trouble than it 's worth . |
4 | I 'm sure you should n't go round in the middle of a performance . |
5 | Anyone who once thought a 73B bus was a giant blue salamander following him down Baker Street is living proof that you should n't mess around in the medicine chest . |
6 | There are some aspects of our personalities which may not come over in the brief span of an interview , but which those close to us know only too well . |
7 | They may not catch on in the north-east ! |
8 | Now upstairs there are people working , so when you get to the far end we ask you do n't go straight upstairs , if you can wait please and we 'll we 'll we 'll all you 'll all go up in the room together , . |
9 | They 'll all come off in the first wash . |
10 | ‘ I 'll just finish up in the kitchen . ’ |
11 | Her whole life was acting — she 'll never settle down in the country . |
12 | I 'd rather get up in the morning |
13 | I 'd only end up in the doghouse myself would n't I ? |
14 | Gone were the days when she could just get up in the morning , make coffee , leave a note for Mrs Bennett and go off to Brentwoods with , maybe , the anticipation of quite an exciting day . |
15 | We 'd just sit around in the front parlour of my house and smoke Typhoo Tea in my dad 's pipe . |
16 | If you want gourmet cooking you could always scout around in the village and see what you can get ! |
17 | The youth drew the pirogue up the grey sand and crept forward to the clearing , and stood , trying to piece together the disorder that he could dimly pick out in the darkness . |
18 | But on the other hand she could n't stand out in the corridor indefinitely . |
19 | They were saying about they keep asking her because she could be like page three models in the newspaper , she was like very even this really and then she just said I keep on going toilet and she 'd , she 'd then puke up in the toilet and she 'd come back and there were all these bite marks so her parents could see when she was doing it . |
20 | As the Ice Age stabilised , the run-off of nitrogen-rich sediments would decline , the marine organisms would fare less well , and carbon dioxide could again build up in the atmosphere , playing a part in ending the cooling phase ( Nature , vol 302 , p 328 ) . |
21 | Right they 'd certainly go up in the domestic |
22 | On the way to Mrs Zamzam 's land , I looked across the same Lebanese border from the Israeli side and could actually make out in the far distance Mrs Zamzam 's camp at Rashidiyeh inside Lebanon . |
23 | • Shy fish may also miss out in the hustle and bustle of community feeding . |
24 | The nurse may also come back in the evening , especially in the beginning , in order to help the patient with medicines , such as insulin injections for diabetes , and to position him correctly in bed . |
25 | The hard-edged anti-romanticism of the 1980s tried to eschew such practices ; but the pendulum may well swing back in the ‘ 9Os . |
26 | The gubernatorial trial balloon may well fall back in the Speaker 's face because , quite simply , there is not enough air in it . |
27 | we shall all end up in the same place |
28 | He was being told in no uncertain terms that he could come out of all this as the loving , caring father who would do anything to keep his daughter 's reputation ; who welcomed her choice of husband with open arms ; who would not bow down in the face of adversity , but would rise up and conquer it . |
29 | The women , as usual , bore the brunt of it , for everyone stayed up late , children refused to go to bed at night and men would not get up in the morning . |
30 | ‘ She would often get out in the night and sleep on the floor , usually next to us . |