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

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31 As a result , Graham always sleeps in a cot by his parents ' bed .
32 The social workers always worked as a team and whenever we met a roomful of people arrived .
33 The knotting process always begins at the side of the rug ( after the selvedges have been secured ) by tying a knot on each pair of warp strands in a horizontal direction across the width of the rug .
34 I went through to the dining-room and helped myself to a pint of the neuron-friendly punch Uncle Hamish always made for the event .
35 Williams always wrote in a way which deserves the label of ‘ political ’ in the sense in which that term is used by Cleaver ( 1979 ) .
36 On borrowing Mr Kinnock seems not to realise that borrowing always increases during a recession .
37 Fred would offer to cook the meal and even wash the baby but Carrie always declined with a smile and a determined shake of her head .
38 But the Bainbridges always go into the Army , ’ but he had forgiven her , eventually , when she promised to try to take her leave when he took his .
39 It was Buddie 's signature tune , the one his band always played at the start of every session .
40 His blessing always comes as a surprise , and can be recognized by its very ‘ arbitrariness ’ and seeming absurdity .
41 And Miss Gilberd and that awful Muggeridge always come through the back , because it 's the quickest way from their homes .
42 Empirical investigation always deals with a sample of a phenomenon , never a fully enumerated population .
43 In this widely accepted view [ of pluralism ] , no one group always dominates to the exclusion of others .
44 Of course these are generalisations and actual placement always depends on the individual .
45 Someone told me how her director always says at the end of her outpourings , ‘ Let us keep silent and wait on the Holy Spirit ’ .
46 In the inflationary expansion one might expect that eventually the symmetry between the forces would be broken , just as supercooled water always freezes in the end .
47 Revolution always unfolds inside an atmosphere of rising expectations .
48 The Halifax 's name always remains in the frame as a conversion possibility .
49 Denis Smith says he 's always been a Stoke fan and his name always comes into the reckoning when the job is going and he 's made no secret of the fact that he 'd like to manage the club
50 The hon. Gentleman always comes to the House badly briefed .
51 It 's one of those smiles Oriental stewardesses always wear in the telly ads .
52 If the first state among siblings always leads to a goal , it will be much more efficient than the breadth first version ; but otherwise it may be worse .
53 BTW Mark — I now gather that Jon Newsome always goes to the cash machine that 's INSIDE the bank .
54 But Trevor always arrived in the morning as if he 'd not had a drink .
55 George was active locally in more ways than one , his political sympathies always directed to the Left and to helping such bodies as the Spanish Relief Committee .
56 Their confidence soared and crashed in the space of seven minutes at the start of a game always haunted by the spectre of relegation .
57 The results however are quite clear : positive cooperativity always occurs at the gal P1 promoter , independent of the C-terminal part of the α-subunit but is only observed with the intact wild-type enzyme at the lac promoter .
58 The nineteenth-century expansion of London in general and west London in particular was complex and not by any means always related to the arrival of the railways .
59 This scientific attitude did not by any means always lead to a denial of the reality of God ; but it did not encourage the anticipation that God would actually intervene in the ordinary course of events ; nor , when faced with a strange or unexpected occurrence , would it immediately turn to God as the only possible explanation .
60 By a painter who befriends him , and who sleeps for a while with his mother , Jaromil , already self-perceived as exceptional , original , is introduced to modern art , which ‘ had not yet become the shopworn property of the bourgeois masses and retained the fascinating aura of a sect , a magical exclusivity fascinating to childhood — an age always daydreaming about the romanticism of secret societies , fraternities and tribes ’ .
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