Example sentences of "[verb] [pers pn] in [art] [noun sg] [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | He quotes the view of Aristo , who produces two arguments : first , that by analogy with relegatio dotis and the stipulatio emptae hereditatis the word ‘ sums ’ should be held to include objects as well as money ; second , that intention is particularly important in trusts , and it appears to be the testator 's intention in first speaking generally of ‘ sums ’ and then mentioning certain objects to include them in the expression too . |
2 | Well it 's good to see them in the bath anyway having a good good old splash about , you know ? |
3 | The Russian Sputnik had been launched two years before , and produced in the United States a feverish alarm lest their Communist competitors should outstrip them in a world increasingly penetrated by science and technology . |
4 | He has studied the details of their forms and physiognomy and renders them in a manner both truthful and original . |
5 | so it 's bad enough if they gather them in the gathering them in the barrel like , the barrel bit , but not the sort of |
6 | They are not prescriptive and it is open to you to implement them in the way that best suits your firm . |
7 | So I asked them in the lodge like do n't do any damage and Tom was in e he gave them a good lecture so and the lads in the lodge said , Well look you tell them as well not to do this attitude and perhaps you 've seen it on these flumes when they saw a crowd that was there they were changing gear with the Land Rover and through you know like anybody in the way you 'd be underneath . |
8 | You 've been clever enough to catch me in a honeytrap partly of my own making ! |
9 | ‘ I need two or three good club games under my belt first and if I do well in those I hope they will include me in the team again . ’ |
10 | ‘ But why did you ask him to meet you in the garden instead of in the house ? ’ |
11 | The operation was a success and husband Peter , from Wythenshawe , Manchester , visited her in the ward later in the day . |
12 | BRITISH spy Ian Spiro left bloody fingerprints smeared on his son 's bedroom walls after blasting him in the head twice with a handgun . |
13 | ‘ Seems reasonable , ’ said Dod , like he 'd seen Richard Widmark say it in a film once , really chill . |
14 | When the blessed saint visited us in the church there , as before in vision , she came with showers of may-blossom . |
15 | That shop , I do n't know what the name of that shop is , but I 've seen them in the window lately |
16 | Course , I was looking out the window and I know he took I picked it out and it I looked again , there 's another one in there , course she 's only getting out the bath put them in a bowl like I was ! |
17 | And we used to catch them alive , take them out , put them in a bag together again , and off home again do you see . |
18 | Why did I , why did I do , put them in the machine instead of dropping them on the floor then ? |
19 | Then they used to take the others back and put them in the yard again . |
20 | I think they 'll grow if you put them in the garden eventually . |
21 | But in the aftermath of the war , Robertson and Alan Sked were responsible for a political blunder which put them in the news again . |
22 | I once worked in the shopfloor in a factory , putting cream on to cream cakes , when I finished college , and they took me out and put me in the lab even though I did n't have any science degree , and I was in the labs for three months . |
23 | So do strong aggressive animals which are well able to protect their babies even if they do not deposit them in a den deep underground . |
24 | By the way , I 'm sorry if I dropped you in the soup just now . ’ |
25 | As Mr Leslie had explained earlier he was completely sober and was not given to imagination , he screwed his eyes up looking for the reason for the footsteps ; he could n't see the feet but heard them quite distinctly passing him in the ballast below . |
26 | They buried him in the churchyard here . |
27 | Put him in a coach now and by morning Russell might be used to being close to white people again . |
28 | Lucy reckoned that , for the man in charge , he had some staggeringly dull tasks to handle ; she 'd seen him in the stockroom once , counting every bottle in every crate of tonic water . |
29 | She had recognised him instantly , though she had seen him in the flesh only once before and that had been across a crowded ballroom . |
30 | mum 's done it in a sweater then it |