Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb mod] [prep] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | In other words , I will in due course adopt the child . |
2 | However , how can this phenomenon be illuminated by means of the metaphor of levels of programming language , on which view the ‘ lower activities ’ are inscrutable at the ‘ higher level ’ , given that , after a road accident , say , I can by conscious effort retrain myself to walk properly ? |
3 | I have my doubts about this one but you may in due course get a proposal from him . |
4 | But you must up awful square with that . |
5 | You might in good time like to write a pop-psychology book under that title ? |
6 | Mrs Henry found out all she could about alternative cancer treatments and dabbled in some of them . |
7 | The term ‘ annunciation ‘ ( announcement ) is that given to the message presented by the angel Gabriel to the Blessed Virgin Mary that she would in due time be delivered of the Son of God , and the festival commemorating this — Lady Day — has the date 25 March . |
8 | Refer to the To Wound Chart to determine the roll needed to wound , and roll a dice per hit as you would for multiple bow or crossbow hits . |
9 | As this is a compact bush tomato there is no need to pinch out the side-shoots as you would on standard tomato varieties . |
10 | Obviously , you will need much heavier tackle when fishing in snaggy water than you will in open water . |
11 | Well you can with double glazing , some |
12 | Find out everything you can about nuclear energy . |
13 | Over and over again , in all cultures , psychoanalytic investigations insistently reveal what Freud termed the ‘ Oedipus complex ’ but what we might with equal justice call the ‘ Gelada complex ’ . |
14 | We will in actual fact make a profit in the second year erm although that 's gon na be against the fi first year loss . |
15 | Columbia and Venezuela have yet to achieve maturity though they may in due course . |
16 | And it was er They used to great pride in their in their er stacks because they had to make them as neat as they could and er well built , so that if the So that w that was good for the To keep the the wind keep them dry . |
17 | It should describe how the characters , usually non-aristocratic or less educated , express moods , emotions and actions as they would in real life . |
18 | They may communicate more fully than they would in real life but this is to my advantage as the reader because it increases my relief and my pleasure . |
19 | The composition and terms of reference of urban development corporations will be changed immediately and they will in due course be wound up in an orderly way . |
20 | He may with good reason be regarded as the first of that long line of professional civil servants who did more than any others to make and destroy the medieval Church : they were professional administrators , equipped to forward the interests of government not by main force but by negotiation amidst the intricate issues of law and theology ; men of international standing , retaining the respect of their opponents , and not too hatefully or too personally involved in the cause which they were required to maintain . |
21 | He was an exception among the British dancers in wanting to find our as much as he could about American ballet teachers . |
22 | He has got tremendous vision and in midfield he can express himself that bit more than he could at right back . |
23 | By contrast , if the forged words were not in the documents , he could with pardonable exaggeration use the words ultimum quasi robur . |
24 | Foo saw the waves as a watery pyre , where he would in due course achieve martyrdom . |
25 | There was then little belief in the value of the Coalition Liberals , but a strong belief in the value of Lloyd George ; he would be a good advocate with the new electorate and he would in due course be disarmed as Chamberlain had been . |
26 | While it has the advantage of putting slurry at plant root level where it can be used quickly , it can not bury the same volume of slurry or reduce the smell as much as it can with deep injection . |
27 | Since any comprehensive peace implies a reduction of influence by , and local dependency on , the superpowers , it can not be assumed that either superpower has a strong interest in a genuine peace , unless it is able to derive greater advantage from peace than it can from continued conflict . |
28 | The new congregation has a heaven sent opportunity to begin again to do all it can in public worship to present Christ in such a way that those who do n't know him can find him . |
29 | He in turn comforts them as best he can with modern medicine . |