Example sentences of "[pron] [modal v] [adv] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | I shall then in fact have to stay on the alert . ’ |
2 | The hippocampus is one of the regions of the mammalian brain whose structure , connectivity and geometry are well understood and which should therefore in principle make such a mapping possible . |
3 | She had imagined that she could always at will appear poised and in complete control of her emotions . |
4 | A good judge of character , Charles , she would sometimes with surprise reflect . |
5 | In the Wolverton of 1942 there was no library , no café , no bookshop , no cinema , and thus an unsophisticated Scots girl who would never at home have entered a public house often found herself of an evening among Bletchley friends in The Galleon , an inn overlooking the Grand Junction Canal at Old Wolverton , where the brightly-painted barges plied up and down from London to Manchester , and noting how different was the English pub from the uncouth male preserve that was its Scottish counterpart . |
6 | You can also of course be selective about both activities . |
7 | We can only by hope but er you know , with creating new ideas , keeping the quality good , so you know you feel right with prices your pocket and er therefore we will survive . |
8 | One can also of course speculate on the future ! |
9 | No one can live by abstraction alone . |
10 | However , there will always in practice be an unmatched position . |
11 | It is based on the modular system and it is hoped our two experts , Messrs. V. Hull and C. Largefeuille will commence training and then , examining any of our Accredited Tutors who are interested in this subject , they will then in turn be able to teach embalmers these specialised skills . |
12 | The alternative is that the dog , like the children , has the capability of becoming aware of the misery of its present existence , although it may never in fact do so . |
13 | I told him proudly he should never in future discuss money in relation to his work . |
14 | But it could always of course come in as an odd . |
15 | He would never in life agree willingly-or let the king agree — to any settlement but a total victory over the Welsh , and the hanging of all their leaders into the bargain . ’ |
16 | It will all without question make the schools and LEAs more accountable , at least in terms of pupil performance , to parents and public . |
17 | If you 're buying a new computer screen it will now by law have to comply with European standards in terms of low radiation emissions and lack of screen flicker . |
18 | It can also in effect make it impossible for them to participate in the community and thus deprives them of an important aspect of citizenship . |
19 | It must always involve an excess beyond the totality without which the totality could never be totalized , which must mean that it can never in fact be closed . |
20 | So though it is hard to imagine the stealthy fighter-bombers , map-reading cruise missiles and pinpoint bombs that won the Gulf war being beaten by Brazilian , Chinese or Russian weapons for decades , there is a good argument for what will now in effect be an arms race by America against itself . |