Example sentences of "[adj] [verb] [adv prt] [prep] [pron] " in BNC.
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1 | He had previously worked for the firm and was due to go back to it . |
2 | ‘ Yes , that fits in with everything I 've heard about her , ’ she told Eddie . |
3 | Ca n't get rid of him , yeah and that fits in with what we were saying the other day about the Freudian kind of relation between the three of them . |
4 | So we 'll get that checked out for you Alan and we 'll |
5 | Yeah I know , I 've got that pencilled in for something . |
6 | The managing director makes very sure that he knows all that goes on in his firm . |
7 | And most of that goes back to him for his karate and a pint of beer in the pub . |
8 | And that goes back to what I said earlier , in that we just do n't see ourselves working internally , in meetings , in negotiations and report binding , with erm , with other officer 's , we see ourselves as a vocal point to get in information out , to , to people , erm and working with people , erm , and that 's erm again a major part of the work we do and just as an example of something that we provide , this is erm , this is the hidden divide , the bulletin of Harlow 's Anti Poverty Strategy Group , this is the latest edition , and it 's just an update on erm impact of eh living in Britain in nineteen ninety one today , the people who are on low income , but we , we 've produced that quarterly , erm , but there , we produce loads of leaflets , were always producing leaflets , and basically if there 's a major piece of legislation there be , there be something worth getting use on it . |
9 | Like physical ailments and er our , our , our physical body does n't work like it used to , and as you do get older there is a tendency to more to , to need more rest , we ca n't do what the young ones er do , and we would love to do that and that goes along with what the council and the |
10 | She did not need to have that pointed out to her . |
11 | ‘ Sorry to go on about it , squire , ’ he said . |
12 | Process engineer Lawrence Wan lived up to his name when he achieved a hole-in-one on the Shetland Golf Club course . |
13 | Which perhaps not revolutionary but to me it was er it was but of all these things that er we 've done lots of things you know , but the thing that I , that stands out in my memory is is that er it 'd be about nineteen forty eight , there was a a one of the old members who I worked with was , lived alone and he was very ill . |
14 | Oh I 'll get that sorted out for you . |
15 | Has fertility changed mostly because successive cohorts each grow up with their own characteristic attitude to childbearing ( ‘ cohort ’ effects ) , or do families respond in a more opportunistic way to the economic and social opportunities or problems of the moment ( ‘ period ’ effects ) ? |
16 | She works ordinary hours so Anne 's not often free to go out with her now . ’ |
17 | And of course he goes in and the horse drops in the far side of the wee barn , and er Old goes in with his dram and he dips it into the horse trough you ken , and he turns you ken with his regimental , |
18 | But erm I du n no there 's some of them were n't prepared to carry on with it , you know these youngsters , there was a lot of 'em they would n't , anyway everybody 's not hundred percent you 're not going to get anywhere with anything . |
19 | Terry Eagleton of Oxford made the comment , er oh I think a year or two ago , in the Sunday Times that er there is too much established in the name William Shakespeare for anyone to be willing to fool around with it . |
20 | He accuses them of running up a hundred million pound debt during their years in control , and says the Tories are wrong to go along with them . |
21 | This fits in with our strategy to expand our health care and defence contracts . |
22 | The child who is abused or belittled will often , when an adult , seek out others who will treat him in the same way as this fits in with his inner image of himself . |
23 | Although Patrick Lundy was almost twenty , Katherine still considered him a child and treated him accordingly , and often it was easier to go along with her rather than risk an argument . |
24 | Erm then he 's very willing to go round with us . |
25 | The largest companies told Mr Chiles they were willing to go along with his programme in the belief that they could compete . |
26 | She was being racially harassed and was afraid to go out into her garden . |
27 | This goes back to what I was saying about the ‘ fellowship ’ of conferences and similar events and how important it is for people to enjoy themselves and make contacts . |
28 | I 've always enjoyed it and sometimes I wonder if er probably , as I think I 've think I said before , erm this goes back to what kind of a secretary you 've got , you see . |
29 | This goes back to his championing of Switzerland ; in 1809 he tried to challenge the Government with a tract On the Convention of Cintra . |
30 | Well er in general I would say that erm and this goes back to my earlier discussion o of , of the pleasure principle . |