Example sentences of "[verb] [conj] [pron] [verb] [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 I 've only ever seen part of it I mean where they get it rigged up and the hit man keeps coming back and he , he keeps seeing him and he 's , he 's walking round the place and
2 My flower — the one that I remember best out of many — was gathered where I said it had been .
3 So I set about a solution which has led to healthy plants which remain where I want them — despite being planted in very high flow undergravel filters .
4 colour this is not going to go where I want it to go .
5 well you do n't have to go where you give you one
6 Unless you hit the ball absolutely right , it is n't going to go where you want it to go .
7 Buying direct from the charity , or a charity-run shop , is the best way to make sure the money goes where you want it to .
8 It 's if it goes where you want it to that 's hard .
9 Where she met where she met him then ?
10 In addition , retinoic acid is insoluble in water and so would remain where we put it in the limb for some time ; this was important because we already knew that to exert its effect the grafted polarizing region needed more than 12 hours .
11 In fact I mean you can buy or I mean you 've got the record of erm how far back , you could invite all the existing , living parish councillors , so far as we could , and , and that , that would be , I think that would be fascinating .
12 The patches can then be located where you want them among the preamp 's memory locations ( or programs ) , and then called up by a MIDI pedal .
13 Have you ever put something of value in a ‘ safe place ’ , and then forgotten where you put it ?
14 Though Wallace was inclined to draw his line round some of the islands with a blacker and firmer pencil than are modern zoologists , nevertheless the Wallace Line still stands where he put it , as the division between the two regions .
15 I 'm just praying that we win it .
16 The crowd gave a good send-off to the latter when he was substituted so I suppose he did well .
17 I suggest that we take them not only seriously but literally , since they represent the very root of the relationship around which the Sonnets are structured .
18 McAllion ) very seriously and I suggest that we debate them in a sensible manner .
19 But before you leave I suggest that you make it your business to find out .
20 Well do I know that we drove you into flight .
21 So far as the main thrust of the honourable gentleman 's question is concerned er he will know that we believe it to be right and indeed in the interests of all the people in Northern Ireland that the British and Irish government should work closely together .
22 Did you know that they exiled me — me !
23 Anyone viewing all this nonsense from another planet — as most men do — can be forgiven for assuming that women are a bunch of mixed up crazies who do n't know what they want , but do know that they want it all , both ways and with jam on the top , too .
24 Oh I do n't know that you get it back .
25 Let the other person know that you know they 're not God .
26 ‘ Do n't you know that you caught me at an age when Taureans are at their most vulnerable ?
27 At work , emotional needs are stronger than a lot of people realise ; by letting people know that you have them , and identifying theirs , you can gain influence .
28 ‘ You did n't know that he acquired them through his wife who must have got them while she was housekeeper-companion to Mrs Armitage ? ’
29 We did n't go to the funeral , but me cousin Dora who was Aunt Lucy 's daughter , she got there was er Walter , , Walter and Leonard were in a pram and me cousin Dora went down Lane and wh to the corner of Street and watched the funeral go past up to I 've got vague memories of that they 're not clear but I do know that he took us to watch me dad 's funeral past the corner of Street and I presume that now that it must have gone up Street up to Street street , cos he 's buried at Ryecroft .
30 But first she must know that he loved her .
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