Example sentences of "[vb base] [pers pn] [verb] [adv] a " in BNC.

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1 Make them feel almost a part of it , thought Dalziel .
2 I mean I I certainly accept that I mean I think there a lot of problems on the in the stage door club several nights of the years .
3 ‘ I expect you do quite a bit of travelling in your work ? ’ he probed , when she wanted to be the one asking the questions .
4 ‘ How d' you feel about a second honeymoon ? ’
5 ‘ Regarding Alfred Glynn , I want you to get together a small team , with a dog handler , to await instructions .
6 It might , but if say we said over a year , and we said there 're a total number of fifteen members of staff ,
7 Let me give just a few facts and figures .
8 It takes only a few thousands of eV ( keV ) to bring two nuclei together and if they fuse you get over a million eV ( MeV ) in return .
9 Let him see therein an infinity of universes , each of which has its firmament , its planets , its earth , in the same proportion as in the visible world …
10 As the launch and the bows of the sinking yacht were now almost level it took only a few seconds to transfer the six survivors — another had joined the group of five that Talbot had seen — aboard the launch .
11 Of these orthodoxies , the ideological ones are perhaps the easiest to explain here , and they are relevant to what I have to say later , so let us consider here a very general point about the effects of ideology — the apparent contrast between typical models of ancient language states , on the one hand , and recent language states on the other .
12 Let us consider now a somewhat different example where instead of uniform translation the loop rotates in a constant magnetic field .
13 Let us notice only a clear objection for which the way has been prepared .
14 ( Let us take also a minimalist definition of feminism , as meaning the proclaimed equality of women and men . )
15 Let us take just a few examples of strongly formed collectivities with a broadly socialist orientation to illustrate the point .
16 Let us put now a sheet of opposite charge a distance d away from the first sheet ( fig. 2.14 ) .
17 No I think white for here is best cos the sun is quite I mean you get quite a lot of sun do n't you on on on this side of the house .
18 y I mean you know quite a lot about electrical things , practically
19 Those of us who enjoy them need only a name for each condition , so that we may discuss them in expectation and in recollection .
20 generally speaking the nation had good ears , they knew what was what and they listened quite well , hear you deaf ones he 's describing them and look forth to see you blind once verse twenty it was a case of seeing many things , but you did not cheat watching and Daniel , verse twenty five , look it says there a little phrase near , half way through that he took no note , the nation took no note of what was happening at that time , but we know what happened to them , many of them , thousands , a million of them lost their lives did n't they ?
21 Well I just find these , I mean we had quite a few now
22 I know I went quite a way down .
23 No I was n't there I was in Switzerland but it was quite nice because they had carte blanche they have some preview of it you know you had like a band playing
24 I think you get you get either a man who really likes shopping do n't you ?
25 I know we 've only a small garrison left , but he ca n't get in and you 're hardly a runaway slave , no matter what de Raimes intended in the past .
26 And er , I know they want over a hundred pound just for a caravan for a week do n't they ?
27 Aye well this man that I ke know he had quite a lot of money and he just gave a six pence to the kirk , and he had always plenty of money when he died .
28 ‘ Well , ’ said the young man modestly , ‘ I suppose I had quite a reputation .
29 ‘ Mr Jacobsen , ’ she said carefully , ‘ as I believe I intimated just a moment ago , I 'm just about to leave . ’
30 I 'm Nigel I 'm Chief Executive of the National Charity Community of Transport which is based in Manchester , and it 's that last point which is really significant behind my question , and it concerns your new premises and , I 'm one it 's a question as to what your planning to do , and secondly , a request if you 're not , er , that you could provide within that some working space for people from out of town , to use when we 're in London , complete with things like , you know , coin operated fax machines , because I find I spend quite a lot of time in London , you have meetings on successive days , you have time to kill , and there 's no where sort of , comfortable to go and sit down and get on with some things .
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