Example sentences of "[vb base] [conj] [verb] [pron] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | Like Matthew , we will keep creating realities which coax or provoke us into feeling anger — by being hurt , by suffering from injustice , by seeing a world full of hatred and cruelty . |
2 | If this has no effect , try expressing some milk before the morning feed ; refrigerate or freeze it for use later . |
3 | IT WAS a two-part induction process that dragged me into the brawling hostelry in the sky of NME Towers . |
4 | The penalty is that you have to decide what sizes you want and prepare them in advance , a process that can take quite a time and uses up a considerable amount of disk space . |
5 | At a push , you could use a disk editor , such as the one included with Norton Utilities , to recover files — just hunt down the file you want and copy it to a new file . |
6 | Now , the cheats amongst us ( like me ) will discover that you can import graphics into the Cel editor , and will quickly come to the conclusion that very lifelike images can be formed by using a scanner to scan individual frames from a film , and then pick out the bits they want and place them on cels to form a small animated sequence . |
7 | ‘ We gets what we want and puts it in the freezer — got no use for shoppin' us . ’ |
8 | In response to Mr Fothergill 's letter concerning Carlton amps , we enjoy being in the music business , and to us that means listening to what guitarists want and doing something about it . |
9 | In June too , after an attempt to repel the rebels had failed , and the leaders of the royal force , Sir Humphrey Stafford and William Stafford , had been killed at Sevenoaks , the government had tried to placate the Kentishmen by arresting Crowmer and Say and sending them to the Tower , and when Cade 's men entered London in July , those two were among their earliest victims ( 16 , p.192 ) . |
10 | Do you know , at Fontainebleau he set up a system of mirrors so he could watch his young ladies pose and inspect them from every angle , whilst his palaces were full of secret passageways with peep-holes in every bedroom for Francis was deeply interested in the sexual exploits of others . |
11 | Cheer and uphold them with the knowledge of your love and restore them to full health . |
12 | Cheer and uphold them with the knowledge of your love and restore them to full health . |
13 | Cheer and uphold them with the knowledge of your love and restore them to full health . |
14 | Cheer and uphold them with the knowledge of your love and restore them to full health . |
15 | Cheer and uphold them with the knowledge of your love and restore them to full health . |
16 | Cheer and uphold them with the knowledge of your love and restore them to full health . |
17 | Cheer and uphold them with the knowledge of your love and restore them to full health . |
18 | Cheer and uphold them with the knowledge of your love and restore them to full health . |
19 | A new bank account that keeps you in touch and in the know . |
20 | You could listen almost any time , anywhere — especially with your Walkman headset that filtered nothing but a mildly irritating hiss to passengers in your bus , say , or your train compartment . |
21 | It is often guilt or fear that stops us from telling the truth . |
22 | GAME show host Leslie Crowther is fully conscious again , five weeks after the car crash that put him in a coma . |
23 | Leslie , who lives at Corston , near Bath , Avon , has not spoken since the Rolls-Royce crash that put him in Bristol 's Frenchay Hospital . |
24 | Subject to paragraphs 5 and 6 below , the Funding Council shall have the power — ( a ) to acquire , hold and dispose of land and other property ; ( b ) to enter into contracts , including contracts for the employment of staff for the purposes of the discharge of their functions ; ( c ) to invest any sums not immediately required by the Funding Council for the purpose of their carrying on any of the activities which they have power to carry on ; and ( d ) to accept gifts of money , land or other property and apply it to , or hold or administer it in trust for , the purpose of the discharge of any of their functions . |
25 | Tests show that eating lots of fibre or switching to polyunsaturated fats has about as much chance of prolonging your life as wearing a wig , but a kipper two or three times a week will have your life assurance rep collecting the premiums for ever . |
26 | I hope that got us through the little post-lunch siesta period , erm , we 're going to do another er , time management game now which will take about half an hour , and I need to split you up once again into groups , erm , okay . |
27 | It is a remarkably piscatory street — a choice of three fish-and-chip shops , a jellied eel bar and an excellent wet fish shop that smokes everything from conger eel and whole salmon down to the humble sprat . |
28 | If you have to share , clean the used equipment immediately it was last used , separate the needle , barrel and plunger and clean them in hot tap water and washing up liquid , remove all traces of blood , rinse the works thoroughly with clean water and do the same with any spoons etc . |
29 | aplomb and turn it to your advantage by laughing at yourself , ‘ I am so hap-p-p … |
30 | Hall uses the Marxist philosopher Althusser and the social psychology of Laclau to argue that politics is not just about individuals and social groups pursuing their immediate material interests ; it is also about how they imagine and identify themselves in relation to the wider social world . |