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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 These have something of the character and purpose of propaganda about them and they therefore need cautious exegesis , but they at least manifest the king 's view of his subjects ' expectations and in doing so reveal the model to which he felt he should conform .
2 ‘ I 'm mad because I had the money for them but I just could n't get time to shop with the hours we 've been working . ’
3 These secondary resources are so abundant , however , that competition rarely arises for them and they thus constitute a reserve when primary resources are few .
4 In those areas people can see what Labour councillors are doing for them and they only have to look at what Labour councillors are achieving locally and they will transfer their votes to labour for a national election ’ .
5 ‘ In the second half it became increasingly difficult for them and we simply capitalised on our chances . ’
6 ‘ In the second half it became increasingly difficult for them and we simply capitalised on our chances . ’
7 Well , when we say horrifying car crash what we really mean is that one of the two cars got a puncture and the other vehicle bashed into the back of them but you never know , it could have been worse .
8 His wife , Aunt Ann , was kept heavy with child most of the time , but she lost most of them and they only had the four .
9 You can forgive or punish at the same time ca n't you , you can punish somebody and say that is wrong and yet you forgive them , that is you do n't hold it against them but you later on .
10 Applause broke out behind them but she hardly heard a thing .
11 There was the sound of a car behind them and it suddenly became very light .
12 But they had all their equipment with them and they just stood on the deck and underneath below deck were the people who rowed the boats over .
13 I told him that I did n't mix with them and it never came into my life or my conversation . ’
14 But I 'm not very well with them and I just think they 're terrible .
15 The first thing they will then discover is that all the other grown-ups in the room tower above them and they actually have to crane their necks to look at their faces .
16 She opened her arms as if to gather him into them but he simply grinned and walked straight past her .
17 Stony corals , their relatives , often grow alongside them and they too are colonial creatures .
18 Personally we do n't put much stock in them but you never know .
19 There had been a period when he allowed Barbara Castle , Dick Crossman and George Wigg , all of whom suffered from the belief that politics was a conspiracy , to influence him too much , but in later years he had broken free from them and I suddenly realised how much I had got used to him being there to shoulder the final responsibility , to feeling able to turn to him naturally for a second opinion and for well-informed advice .
20 And many of those things do have dangers attached to them but they also have , potentially , a bit of f er er fun attached
21 I think it 's true to say that we give it to them and we also drink it ourselves .
22 We never based ourselves on them but we just developed that way .
23 The guns were blazing away at them but they just kept coming .
24 ‘ Piss orf , ’ I hissed at them and they calmly turned away and continued down the street , convinced I really was a genuine cabby .
25 Some people , all you need is one look at them and you just know their feet are going to smell .
26 The er his report has gone to the policy group it 's been talke discussed by them and it now goes to the policy advisory group .
  Next page