Example sentences of "[pron] [conj] [pron] [modal v] [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | You 've got to knock some sense into them or they 'd never do a stroke . |
2 | You must n't use modern things on them or it 'll really wrock them irreparably and you 've done four thousand pounds worth of damage before you know it . |
3 | ‘ I hope our Mum do n't start borrowin' off of 'er or she 'll never get it back . ’ |
4 | We shall be examining in due course how organization can make fullest use of books , materials , equipment and ancillaries ; we have reminded ourselves that it can also make fullest use of the many abilities in the staff room . |
5 | They wanted Mickey to lose that famous temper of his so they could legitimately nick him . |
6 | If I if I if I could just er er er just move on on to a couple of other other other points i in in what 's been said . |
7 | So Just just so we 're absolutely certain then , sorry if I if I can just take you back to the the l the areas spelt out in paragraph one one . |
8 | And I and I would also say that if if |
9 | So Mrs Taylor , if Cilla has betrayed the city so have I for I could never vote Labour if this is an example of Labour rule . |
10 | The power to choose , the power to choose , well if the power to choose in politics is about the Labour Party choosing their own candidate for the by-election and then the National Party replacing that candidate , well that 's a Party I do n't want to be a party to and that 's nothing that we would ever stoop |
11 | This darkness and this cloud is betwixt thee and thy God , and telleth thee that thou mayest neither see him clearly by light of understanding , nor feel him in sweetness of love in thine affection , and therefore shape thee to bide in this darkness as long as thou mayest , crying after him that thou lovest … |
12 | If little Jimmy 's mother tells everyone that they can never go on a long journey because little Jimmy is always car-sick , then you can be sure that little Jimmy always will be car-sick . |
13 | She said : ‘ It amazes me that they can just stand on the street . ’ |
14 | three four years to get there but it strikes me that we can actually start moving towards that process , not a full sheet of a personal |
15 | In addition Mrs scheme at page forty three provides for a further twenty eight hours a week to be provided in some other way , that it is suggested is parental care , but it seems to me that it would either be parental care or hired care . |
16 | I do intend to er to attend inaugural meetings with each of the C P O s er with a view to looking I mean obviously at some stages you said to me that I would probably have to attend at short notice |
17 | " My friend Lee would smile and tell me that I would never get real unity among seafaring men because they would not stick together . |
18 | In 1537 Ralph Sadler complained to Cromwell about the probable consequences of an enforced withdrawal : ‘ My absence from the court will so much hinder me that I shall never be able to recover . ’ |
19 | He says , Well you tell him from me that I shall never forget . |
20 | They 've made it fairly clear to me that I 'll never be a high-flier , but every company needs some people who are n't high-fliers , and that 's all right by me . |
21 | ‘ He warned me that I 'd never get much credit — that people would be dismissive of my part in the great tradition , ’ said Carrick . |
22 | Even then I started out as a singer , until it struck me that I 'd absolutely no chance of making it — something to do with having an absolutely diabolical voice , I think . |
23 | It occurred to me that I should perhaps wait for my daughter Sophie outside her school , to make sure she understood that I had not abandoned her , had merely left Lou for a man who loved me and would make me happy ; that things would presently calm down , and as soon as Hugo and I had sorted things out a little and established our new home she could join us . |
24 | I 'm sure , rationally , that what happened next actually did happen , but when I write it down , even now after all this time , it seems so amazing to me that I can hardly believe it was true . |
25 | She once told me that she could never commit suicide because of her curiosity about what was going to happen next . |
26 | It occurred to me that he might well have heard me and decided not to answer . |
27 | ‘ From our very first meeting he has always told me that he would never do anything to put the Soviet Union 's security in danger — and he knows that I would never endanger our security . |
28 | He had already been involved in taking prisoners to the mountains and told me that he would now have to think of a way to get Eric there too . |
29 | ‘ But you said … you told me that you would never exhibit the picture . |
30 | The ancient seas had many more kinds of animals in them than we can ever know . |