Example sentences of "[coord] [pers pn] be even " in BNC.

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1 The abyss between us and them is even greater , whether or not they are ‘ on our side ’ .
2 But they all eventually happened and I 'm even writing a textbook .
3 And I was even more curious as to why it was that Milton Friedman could so confidently assert in his writings a belief in the value of freedom , or Harry Johnson in the value of efficiency or Nicholas Kaldor in the value of equality , if it were true that facts and values could be distinguished so clearly .
4 And I was even more astounded when I heard what Norwich were going to pay for him .
5 If my children were ill Laura would send me home immediately and I was even allowed to smoke in their presence . ’
6 I was managing to put our disastrous marriage behind me , and I was even getting to the stage where I could look forward to the future .
7 ‘ Yet I have been in the game for two decades , I 've had a number big race successes and I was even stable jockey for Vincent O'Brien for three years .
8 Now , and you 're even more tired than if you start a family , you know ?
9 There would be virtually no risk of her ringing to check up ; she can ‘ t abide me , and she 's even worse with Frank and the kids .
10 And she was even more impressed as he recalled opening the shoebox , with its matching glass decorations and its vacant space .
11 She was frowning a little as if trying to concentrate , and she was even paler than before .
12 As always , his knack of disarming was successful , and she was even laughing as they went into the foyer of the Tudor Queen where Sam and Anna awaited them .
13 One day , he would get to the bottom of Maggie 's behaviour , although he knew he might have to get her drunk first and she was even wary of sipping wine .
14 The round started off pretty slow and we were even after five or six holes .
15 I do n't know enough actuarial work to be able to and what settlements they should receive , but our own experience is that it 's hard enough to round up pensioners to form an association and we embody deferred pensioners and they 're even harder .
16 Once hatched , they begin to feed on zooplankton and as they grow they prey on larger species and they are even cannibalistic .
17 In most of these countries there 's now a price tag on these toys cum- objets d'art and they are even ending up in rarefied art galleries .
18 ‘ Oh , he knows all the VIPs , ’ she says , ‘ and he 's even introduced me to some of them .
19 He 's also got a Porsche , and a more expensive one than mine , and he 's even sponsored by Carlssen 's clothing company . ’
20 And he 's even worked in India .
21 ‘ Alex too , and he was even younger .
22 A marriage of Baptists believers , this : Charles , unlike his brother John , was never a full member of Badcox Lane Chapel , and he was even to play safe by having his children christened at the parish church ; but it was to the Baptists he turned whenever there was a death in the family , and eventually he and his wife would find a last resting place in the chapel burial ground on Catherine Hill .
23 Hooligans showered him with rotten eggs and he was even punched in Schwerin , east Germany .
24 There may even have been a certain temperamental affinity between Baden-Powell 's Scouting philosophy and the restless energies of Hooliganism , and he was even so outrageous as to recommend the Hooligans to the National Defence Association as ‘ the best class of boy ’ : Predictably , his remarks invited the characteristic reversal of the problem , when a member of the National Defence Association asked :
25 He was told not to promise any date for attainment of Dominion status : ‘ There is no advantage in fixing paper dates ’ , and he was even told not to use the term Dominion status and on no account to make any reference to independence .
26 Bagehot was anxious that the established parties might bid for the support of the working man , and he was even more anxious that a working-class party might arise that would then press for the interests of that class through the ballot box and through Parliament .
27 ‘ Because then the ghaffir came back and he was even more amazed . ’
28 The stubble was gone , and he was even wearing a tie — well , nearly .
29 Neil Kinnock said last night that the rise in interest rates was ‘ a shattering blow both to households right across Britain and also to industries , and it 's even worse because it 's a blow that has been gathering ever since the first day that this Government decided its one and only economic policy would be a reliance on interest rates ’ .
30 And it 's even better because I 've outwitted the TEAM , and there should be something good on tele tonight , and I wonder what there is to eat .
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