Example sentences of "and [indef pn] [prep] [det] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 And everyone round this table could like join .
2 ‘ I 've been sniffing around and nothing about this city smells kosher .
3 But Charles knew very little and nothing at all about management , business and finance .
4 There was no elasticity in them and nothing at all of the swelling sap , rising around him .
5 Yet Grigori Medvedev , the chief engineer at Chernobyl in the 1970s , says in his recent book ( see page 125 ) that Soviet-made Geiger counters registered high levels of radiation on men who had not yet been into the zone , and nothing at all on those who had recently emerged from it .
6 The baby was wearing a pink frilly garment on its top half , and nothing at all , as far as she could see , on its bottom half , but she could not see very well .
7 The letter announcing my visit lay unopened on the mat when she opened the door , and an hour later I came away believing that I admired a woman who could , under these circumstances and in some pain , treat me as if I had just stepped round the corner for a packet of tea ten minutes before , and talk to me about this and that , and nothing at all .
8 A tight foreskin ( phimosis ) is very common among baby boys and nothing at all to worry about .
9 So one bio-day placidly followed another , the ship plunged on through Highlight , and nothing at all of importance happened .
10 ‘ I 've photographed everything in sight and nothing at all will appeal to the readers of Query , much less to the editor .
11 It was clear that the right hon. and learned Gentleman had astonishingly little to say , and nothing at all to say about Labour policies .
12 Anyone wishing to assess the validity of their criticisms , however , will find only a small historical literature in the relationship between private sector interests and public sector agricultural research in the United States and nothing at all in Britain .
13 Go up Road , and from there turn down Follyhouse Lane the continuation of it and you 'd come right to the Dales and nothing at all from there to West Bromwich , and you could see , if you go over one stile from one field then onto another and then brook that now runs through the Road there , that used to be a little country brook that run across the golf course and there was a little stile over it , a little bridge and a stile , then you go straight up to Dells common and not a house in sight .
14 Leeson , by nature taciturn , had told her very little about the original photograph and nothing at all about the research he and the Bristol archivist had done on it .
15 Full entitlement to fees and maintenance could be offered to those on a basic income level ; 25 per cent to those earning , say , £12-£15,000 a year , and nothing to those with higher incomes .
16 The Liberal Democrat spokesman on trade , industry and employment , Malcolm Bruce , attacked the Chancellor 's statement as a Budget of despair and disappointment which provided a little relief for the unemployed and nothing for those attempting to counter the effects of the recession .
17 They got no coolers or anything like that , fridges , and nothing of that you know , and er , you 'd got a , we used to fetch it in the morning and we used to supply Massey 's Lavender 's in and two other , two or three other little places .
18 By the first Friday , I had either worked , or been on-call for thirty hours , and I was beginning to wonder why anyone wanted to become a doctor , for I was extremely tired , and nothing of any real interest had yet happened .
19 Then there are the codling ; wonderful eating and nothing like that tasteless stuff you buy with a crispy brown skin .
20 And nothing in these accounts , whether familiar or otherwise , is compatible with the myths peddled by the merchants of nostalgia .
21 ‘ ( a ) the manner in which , and purposes for which , the product has been marketed , its get-up , the use of any mark in relation to the product and any instructions for , or warnings with respect to , doing or refraining from doing anything with or in relation to the product ; ( b ) what might reasonably be expected to be done with or in relation to the product ; and ( c ) the time when the product was supplied by its producer to another ; and nothing in this section shall require a defect to be inferred from the fact alone that the safety of a product which is supplied after that time is greater than the safety of the product in question . ’
22 ( 5 ) This section does not apply in relation to — ( a ) a contract to grant such lease as is mentioned in section 54(2) of the Law of Property Act 1925 ( short leases ) ; ( b ) a contract made in the course of a public auction ; or ( c ) a contract regulated under the Financial Services Act 1986 ; and nothing in this section affects the creation or operation of resulting , implied or constructive trusts .
23 Section 3(2) of CPA 1987 expressly provides for this as follows : and nothing in this section shall require a defect to be inferred from the fact alone that the safety of a product which is supplied after that time is greater than the safety of the product in question .
24 And no-one at all from the DoE .
25 Folks do chat and someone like this will inevitably go round telling everyone you were rude to them !
26 ‘ There is still a long way to go , though , and nobody at this club forgets that , two seasons ago , Aberdeen made up a ten-point deficit and took Rangers to the last day of the season before they ( Rangers ) won the title . ’
27 erm the roads are really not , not made to cope and so we have to try to get people coming in from different areas and different directions so that we do n't get everybody on one road and nobody on another .
28 You 're a threat and nobody in this place tolerates that , least of all the Stasis … ’
29 Nothing and nobody in this programme questioned the medic 's oath with which it began : ‘ I will keep silence as to anything I have seen or heard in the practice of my profession which it would be improper to divulge . ’
30 Yes , casualties within this organization , and nobody in this hall today can escape the possibility of the knife .
  Next page