Example sentences of "[adj] bring [pron] [adv prt] [prep] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 But then I saw my pitman Liam Beckett giving frantic signals and this brought me back to my senses , ’ he explained .
2 But then I saw my pitman Liam Beckett giving frantic signals and this brought me back to my senses , ’ he explained .
3 Palmer now thought about testing the idea , and this brought him back to his original thoughts about the helium .
4 This brings him back to another of Mr Major 's weekend promises , to give people more of a stake in their local administration : ‘ If they are going to bring local government closer to people , it has got to be more responsive to the wishes of people , and less to the wishes of central Government .
5 This brings me back to one of the many things shared by all three races .
6 This brings me back to my main theme , the need for more concentrated and co-ordinated work on manufacture and distribution , for without it , we will never fully understand the history of the development of the coarse wares , stylistically or chronologically .
7 I would n't define integrated and balanced individually , I 'd link them together , because to me they appear to be er a concept , that you move towards , and the concept to me is shall we say to provide a balanced population structure , which is n't biased to any one sector shall we say , it 's not an elderly , it 's not a retirement village there like perhaps you have in er certain parts of er er North America , and the second element of the concept is that it should provide a range of services compatible with its size , but I qualify that by saying , but not all the services that the people in that settlement require , and this brings me back to my discussion , debate with Mr Curtis .
8 This brings us on to comparing the trust remedies with those discussed before .
9 This brings us on to the second of Dworkin 's grounds for excluding such background policy issues from the jurisdiction of the courts , for if no one has a right to any particular form of decision-making process — whether a right to a hearing itself , a right to cross-examine witnesses or to be given reasons for a decision -this can only be because such a right can not be derived from the master principle of equal concern and respect .
10 But there is yet one further narrowing of the meaning of STYLE to consider , and this brings us on to more controversial ground , where different definitions of style involve conflicting views of the use of language in literature .
11 This brings us on to thinking about how you can integrate video into your lesson .
12 This brings us on to the question of how do organizations assess the effectiveness of their advertising ?
13 This brings us on to the conditions in which the animals are kept .
14 But this brings us back to the initial problem , which was precisely to explain how materialism could accommodate such a ‘ feel ’ .
15 This brings us back to a central theme of Sport and the British : the extraordinary degree to which it has been promoted privately without politicians , employers , or trade unionists taking a significant part except as enthusiastic individual sportsmen .
16 But this brings us back to our original question : how do we identify them ?
17 This brings us back to the underlying issue in this chapter about welfare and dependency .
18 This comment was not entirely facetious and this brings us back to the remarks I made earlier about erm the use of Tampax and the government trying to persuade women to erm use internal sanitary protection .
19 This brings us back to some of the points raised at the beginning of this book .
20 This brings us back to the importance of considering the functions which explanations serve in particular contexts .
21 This brings us back to a relativist position .
22 This brings us back to the refusal of the Court of Appeal to relist .
23 The problem ( and this brings us back to the Frankie story ) is what the disruption of consumption means .
24 The White Paper clearly indicates the government 's intention of shifting the balance of provision away from local authorities , and this brings us back to the mixed economy of welfare or welfare pluralism .
25 This brings us back to the expressive order .
26 This brings us back to our central theme .
27 This brings us back to Le Page 's hypothesis : " the individual creates for himself the patterns of his linguistic behaviour so as to resemble those of the group or groups with which from time to time he wishes to be identified " ; only now we can treat " linguistic behaviour " at a micro level , interpreting " from time to time " to mean even at different stages within the same conversation — perhaps even the same utterance .
28 This brings us back to the recovery phase and the whole process starts over again .
29 The fall of 17 per cent in company liquidations for the third quarter of 1991 brings us down to a figure which is still 44 per cent higher than the same period ; it does not yet represent a net recovery .
30 But he is flying in the face of opposition from the ruling Labour group who recently boycotted a visit by a South African diplomat saying it was too early to bring them in from the cold .
  Next page