Example sentences of "[pron] [prep] a [noun] [prep] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Shanas ( 1979 ) , in her review of American data on family support for the elderly , notes that women are two or three times more likely than men to say that no one helped them during a period of illness . |
2 | do nothing for a fortnight of course . |
3 | ‘ User Friendly did absolutely nothing for a week after the St Leger and got so full of herself that we nearly had to tie her down , ’ smiled Clive . |
4 | So there is nothing for a family to be afraid of . |
5 | A JEALOUS husband stabbed his wife and her toyboy lover to death after spying on them through a chink in the curtains . |
6 | This enables softening to be done simply and economically with waters of a wide range of hardness by passing them through a bed of the granulated material . |
7 | In this same hospital , when relatives come to the mortuary to visit the dead member of their family , they view them through a sheet of glass . |
8 | During the Second World War , for example , a number of government initiatives stimulated thinking about the resettlement of disabled people into open employment by channelling them through a period of ‘ industrial rehabilitation ’ . |
9 | Carter lead them through a doorway onto a staircase . |
10 | I mean you may have to support them through a sort of bad patch , but the idea is to erm get them so that they can look after themselves , you know . |
11 | The nuns led them through a series of exercises which encouraged them to think about the good in themselves , and to know that God , in His love for them , has forgiven their sins . |
12 | It has also produced the Green Partnership , a 12-step programme implemented by the hotels , which guides them through a series of initiatives to make the properties more environmentally friendly . |
13 | In this situation the distance/number of links between the pair could be calculated from the ‘ shortest path ’ connecting them through a sequence of intermediate linked probes . |
14 | But , supposing we look at the same material from the standpoint of , say the authors of the Upanishads , with whom as a matter of fact I happen to agree . |
15 | My father 's passion for Tracey Childs prepared me for a life of drama |
16 | ‘ Do you think your mother would let you go out with me for a day in Newcastle ? ’ |
17 | It was late in the afternoon when we arrived , and Taylor took me for a drive through the town , which apart from the centre had been badly damaged . |
18 | I remember him taking me for a drive in his car when he told me the joyful news about his forthcoming marriage to Rosemary and feeling so happy that he was going to be happy . |
19 | He come round and he asked me for a change of a fiver . |
20 | Instinctively , I dipped my fingers in the holy water and crossed myself , remembering the Catholic aunt in South Armagh who 'd raised me for a while as a child and had anguished over my black little Protestant soul . |
21 | By chance he landed me for a swim at Moutsa down there . |
22 | I had no idea she was using me for a purpose of her own : I was too naive to realise until it dawned on me what it was , a few weeks later . |
23 | ‘ How about forgetting our professional differences and coming with me for a look round the antiques ? ’ |
24 | Mick looked at me for a couple of moments and , scratching his head , he replied If the Marines want you to play your bagpipes in their area , and you agree to do it , then you are all bloody mad . |
25 | Other times , though , if it was a student who stuck with me for a couple of years , eventually they would get interested in reading in some form . |
26 | ‘ Oh well , I suppose it wo n't hurt me for a couple of days . |
27 | The office can bloody do without me for a couple of days . |
28 | ‘ I have to go out ; can you live without me for a couple of hours ? ’ |
29 | She stayed with me for a couple of days before going on to Spain to my sister . |
30 | But that was just a hope he 'd been tossing at me for a couple of years without any interest from me . |