Example sentences of "[adj] [pers pn] [vb -s] [verb] a [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | I do n't believe this she 's got a dog |
2 | ‘ I 'm afraid she 's had an accident , ’ he went on . |
3 | And I believe , in this it 's brought a lot of thing in this town there small town like this . |
4 | He 's still trying to find some he 's phoned a bloke in Plymouth see if he can get them . |
5 | With his leg and one thing and another it does make a difference having a ‘ phone … |
6 | ‘ I 'm afraid he 's had a disappointment . ’ |
7 | Erm if I put two times brackets three add six it does make a difference . |
8 | For thirdly he is careful not to reveal how much he dislikes losing an argument . |
9 | and really always has been , erm , the idea of a centre is , is simply because you consider how much it costs to have a point wired when the house is , is built , er several people nowadays is ha well they buy an old house , they erm , say well we 'll take out the centre light and put us in some wall lights instead you see . |
10 | In those days the government assessed local authority needs according to a very in the grant related expenditure assessment , G R E A , greas and this is much more complex and sensitive measure of how much it costs to run a city and in those days what the government thought we should be spending and what we thought we should be spending seemed in fact to be very close indeed . |
11 | Num number number three he 's got a party . |
12 | Is she aware that the Feltham visitors ' report , which I am sure she has had a chance to read , said that there were only 24 workshop training places for 256 young people ? |
13 | Lazio 's manager , Dino Zoff , says that Gascoigne is all he needs to have a team capable of challenging for the title . |
14 | All he needs to make a success of this is buyers for the shares . |
15 | All it takes to create a sense of country in your home is a little of your imagination and a lot of inspiration from Allied . |
16 | Well I do n't know , just er , I do n't know really , I do n't want to mind cos he 's been there five years , so if he does get made redundant he 's got a chance of getting a little bit of money , not a lot , but it would help . |
17 | Sometimes , when I have to make precious substances such as toenail cheese or belly-button fluff , I have to go without a shower or bath for days and days ; I hate doing this because I soon feel dirty and itchy , and the only bright thing about such abstinence is how good it feels to have a shower at the end of it . |
18 | He 's famous he 's got a wife he 's normally on the news he 's posh and he dresses up smart he writes he writes papers out . |
19 | He 's famous he 's got a wife he 's normally on the news he 's posh and he dresses up smart he writes he writes papers out . |
20 | He 's famous he 's got a wife |
21 | He 's famous he 's got a wife he 's normally on the news he 's posh and he dresses up smart he writes he writes papers out . |
22 | He 's famous he 's got a wife he 's normally on the news he 's posh and he dresses up smart he writes he writes papers out . |
23 | He 's famous he 's got a wife he 's normally on the news he 's posh and he dresses up smart he writes , he writes papers out . |
24 | that 's , that 's gon na happen and the fellows go along with it like when Tony first decided to move and that I thought oh great he 's found a place back in Basingstoke you know , we went and looked at them and everything and he turns round and changes his mind or he 's in the , you know he 's worried or nervous |
25 | In June 1845 he wants to buy a painting of a bear for his room and entitle it ‘ Portrait of Gustave Flaubert ’ — ‘ to indicate my moral disposition and my social temperament ’ . |
26 | Since 1966 it has operated a set of rules known as the ‘ stabilizer ’ which has regulated the behaviour of tour operators and travel agents in the inclusive tour industry . |
27 | And there 's some that are er non-famous it 's got a load of in Hamlet . |
28 | I suppose it is possible he has formed an affection for some boy , " she conceded . |
29 | If sterling were at higher interest rates than the US$ , then clearly this represents a cost to the bank in that it has foregone a return in sterling better than that available in US$ , so that exchange risk can be hedged in the way described . |
30 | Since the early 1960s it has undergone a transformation as great as that of the nineteenth century and has become a new settlement with virtually no connection with agriculture or coal . |