Example sentences of "[noun] always [verb] [prep] [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 A former teacher at Longlands College , Middlesbrough , Pat always believes in laughter as the best medicine for loneliness .
2 For one thing he certainly over-states it when he says that pleasure always comes from satisfaction of an antecedent desire for something other than pleasure .
3 Sainte-Beuve tells us that David always spoke of Diderot with gratitude .
4 Ben always goes on holiday with his owner .
5 This ensured that Canadian stations always differed in appearance from the ‘ Dominion ’ styles adopted in Australia , New Zealand , and even South Africa .
6 Are newsletters always printed on paper of a distinctive colour ?
7 His reflection was fed by information from a wide variety of sources — from the presidential staff at the Elysée , from his ministers , from officials and experts , from the abundant official documentation that passed across his desk , and from the media ( he read all the major French newspapers as well as the Daily Telegraph , the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung , and the New York Herald Tribune , and his normal weekday routine always ended in time for the eight o'clock television news ) .
8 ‘ Anyway , ’ I continue ( while we have it , let's press the advantage home ) , ‘ you know as well as I do that these couplings between the separate spheres always come to grief in the end . ’
9 The implications of this for the relation between how and the infinitive are exactly the same as with need and dare : if the means of realizing the infinitive 's event are not felt to exist , then there is felt to be nothing real occupying the before-position which real means always occupy with respect to the end pursued , and therefore no to preceding the infinitive .
10 Over this time we have continuously expanded and developed our range , with the highest priority always placed on value for money and customer care .
11 Father always kept in touch with Peter and he planned to come and see us when he got leave from France , where he was stationed .
12 In this case , domination is regarded as a universal and ineradicable feature of human societies , explained either by innate differences among human beings ( Pareto , 1915–19 ) or by the superior power which an organized minority always possesses in relation to the unorganized majority ( Mosca , 1896 ) , although in Mosca 's work some concession is made to the view that the progress of democracy reduces the gap between rulers and ruled .
13 Given the assumption that aphasia always occurs after damage to the speech-dominant hemisphere ( which , of course , will not be the case where damage is restricted to regions outside the language areas of the brain ) it is possible to estimate the expected upper limit ( EUL ) for the frequency of aphasia generated by a particular model of speech dominance in the population .
14 The police always looked on top in an eventful first half and translated their superiority into goals just before half-time .
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