Example sentences of "[pers pn] is [adv] [coord] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Helen will also be keeping an eye on the job market while she is away and praying that employers will see her experience in a positive light .
2 Real people : Sibylle Alexander as she is today and pictured with the Kaufmann family at Christmas 1942 .
3 And all the time this is going on she is completely and totally aware of everything that 's going on .
4 She finds she is less and less inclined to blame Tod for her unhappiness .
5 Think I must be blushing , and maybe she is too or is it her English rose complexion kissed , fuck , there I go , kissed ( I should be so lucky ! ) by sudden Mediterranean sunshine ?
6 He poured his mother 's ashes in the place she is now and I am absolutely positive that he knows now she is not coming back . ’
7 It is elegantly and comfortably furnished .
8 In some cases where it is geographically and numerically feasible this has been done within the Catholic sector e.g. Hounslow ; in other areas , normally where a Catholic school stands alone , it has been done in conjunction with State schools e.g. Corby .
9 It is simply and solely a political problem which politicians , political parties and Governments must set about solving through the political process .
10 Results of other research on 10 WFS countries of Sub-Sahara Africa also showed that , " It ( the effect of maternal age of infant mortality ) is associated with selectivity in respect to social and economic factors , though it is principally and directly an effect of physiological determinants " .
11 Thus it is one thing to adopt a radically subjectivist posture towards law reform and another thing entirely to purport merely to be describing the law as it is and then to conclude that it is wholly or even primarily subjectivist .
12 It is completely and increasingly ‘ normal ’ for soldiers to break into houses and mix food with cement ; to leave excrement lying around ; to turn the male population out in the middle of the night to clean the streets and sprinkle them with rose water .
13 It is thoroughly and unutterably embarrassing that a stalker , a ghillie or a farmworker should be paying the same tax as me .
14 Nor does a term cease to be a leasehold because it is determinable by an event which may happen , or which is certain to happen , within the term — e.g. if A holds land for 99 years or for 999 years , ‘ if he shall so long live ’ , he is still a leaseholder , though it is nearly or quite certain that he will not outlive the term .
15 We then sequenced parasite DNA from nine Gambian isolates ( Fig. 2 , legend ) : in each , the ls6 epitope was identical to the published sequence , indicating that it is largely or completely conserved in this population .
16 ( 2 ) The consumption or reception of a text may or may not be auratic , depending on whether it is individually or collectively consumed , or whether the audience views the cultural object in a state of immersion or distraction .
17 What the movies taught Welford Beaton was ‘ we are not interested in average things , whether animate or inanimate — we are interested in anything in the degree that it is above or below the average ’ .
18 Above all , it is easily and quickly made on the K858 .
19 For Gramsci , law reflects economic relations , and it is eternally and generally a weapon of class domination , a classical Marxist position .
20 This is the mystery of sin which has no rational explanation , for it is ultimately and radically inexplicable .
21 However , the colonial administrators were wrong in their particular approach to the problem and it is here and in the reaction of the Africans to colonial attitudes that we can find reasons for failure .
22 It is here and now in Brazil , one of the richest countries in the world .
23 There 's a nice little car up here , that Chevrolet thing I do n't know who 's selling it like , du n no how much it is even but it 's a nice little car .
24 Drama , inevitably , is more culturally specialized by language , but in many of its other elements of movement and scene it is widely and inherently accessible , as is clear in mime and was very evident in the silent film .
25 Mr Court was a principal architect of this Society as it is today and I am grateful for this opportunity to pay tribute to the very considerable part he has played in the development of the Society over the past 16 years .
26 Everything was er so much more difficult than it , than it is today and er things were not sort of disposed of like they are now .
27 At that time , ultrasonagraphy was less developed than it is today and was not available in all 10 treatment centres .
28 We may ‘ believe ’ , or be of the ‘ opinion ’ , that it is universally and certainly true that it is ; but , in relying on experience and observation , we do not ‘ know ’ .
29 Moreover , if we make indiscriminate use of drafting , if it is invariably or artificially imposed , it may well lead to a child 's interest in writing declining .
30 What would be more satisfactory would be the introduction of the American towaway system , in which great lorries with grabs and hooks come round , and without any ado whatever , whoosh the car away from where it is illegally and improperly parked .
  Next page