Example sentences of "and [noun] [vb past] [prep] [det] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 I want to know whether you and Melanie slept in this bed together . ’
2 Dalziel and Pascoe looked at each other for a long moment after the door had slammed behind Evans .
3 The din and chaos continued for some time after help arrived from the êchelon of spectators , Charles and Peregrine among them .
4 Spectra from a clean tungsten surface and from oxygen and hydrogen chemisorbed on that surface are shown in Fig. 2 .
5 She and Frances fell on each other .
6 We came here because our brother and sister went to this school .
7 ‘ Can I … go for a walk in the garden while I think it over ? ’ she blurted , and brother and sister looked at each other .
8 When he came to Noreen , Paddy stopped , and brother and sister stared at each other .
9 Can anyone wonder that disbelief and despondency settled upon many schools in time to give way to anger and protest at the possibility of carrying out tasks that has been imposed on them under impossible conditions .
10 Him and Gary went to that Market over in Tucker .
11 Lancaster and Lincoln served on this basis in Gascony in 1294 and 1298 ; and in Edward II 's reign contract armies became more common as a means of defending the northern border in the absence of the king .
12 They differed greatly in size and structure , but Great Britain , Belgium and Germany fell into this group .
13 Equally significant for the political equilibrium was the rapport which de Gaulle and Adenauer had with each other .
14 Algernon and Heinrich glanced at each other .
15 The fear and revulsion felt by such parents has been well documented by the many parents who have initially wanted their child to die , and then gone on to bring up and care for their mentally handicapped child .
16 After the wedding he and Margaret and Macnab moved to another flat , in Onslow Gardens , South Kensington , where the two men issued a prospectus and set themselves up as private tutors .
17 And she and Marie smiled at each other , like conspirators .
18 He and Branson looked at each other with the candour of two people who know they are utterly different , but for one shared resolution .
19 ‘ Marge ? ’ offered Ivy , in a frank , open tone , and tea went through such stages as could be managed in those days of austerity .
20 An interesting difference between B.Eds and PGCEs emerged from this question on modes of assessment .
21 Many traders , dockers and railwaymen came into these towns which grew rapidly at this time .
22 Finally , the difference in the nature of slavery and wage labour which Marx and Engels discussed in many places has formed the basis of all recent discussion on the subject .
23 In fact , in the race , he and Ronnie bashed into each other on the sixth lap .
24 The presence of tattoo shops , ‘ topless ’ discothèques which offered dancing and music almost twenty-four hours a day were a reminder that Copenhagen was an active and important port , yet the overall effect was charming and romantic as flowers spilled out of window-boxes and the cafés and restaurants vied with each other to attract custom by the quality of their food and their individual décor .
25 Debate as to the relative merits of foot and horse continued for many centuries , and still exists in an attenuated form in the modern technological army .
26 It was perhaps inevitable that one of the benefits that both the wives and husbands saw from this approach was a reduction in stock losses .
27 Ken and Orton related to each other , not just because of their similar sexual proclivities but because of their backgrounds .
28 Juliet and David looked at each other .
29 He and Valerie looked at each other as cordially as two people who loathe each other can .
30 Minsky and Papert studied in some detail how elaborate a perceptron must be in order to recognise a particular class .
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