Example sentences of "[pron] [adv] in [art] [noun] [unc] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | She had witnessed the on-off charm for herself when he had thought himself alone in the Feathers ' coffee-room . |
2 | The wheel , now gone , was probably an external one early in the mill 's life , covered in by later additions , in a similar way to Damsells Mill near Painswick . |
3 | She heard Niall say something softly in the man 's own language , watched the other man 's smile widen as he nodded . |
4 | No one else in the Shah 's entourage knew who he was or why he had come . |
5 | We find it helpful to number modes so that we can refer to them simply in the form νsubn ; . |
6 | Two days after the two men returned from Germany , the SS officer pulled her aside in the officers ' mess . |
7 | ‘ I have played against them twice in the President 's Trophy and they beat us twice fairly and squarely . |
8 | The hurdles in the dissemination race are : H0 — ‘ seeing ’ — saw advertisement H1 ‘ getting ’ — obtained material H2 — ‘ browsing ’ — learned to drive the program H3 — ‘ trying ’ — used it once in the classroom H4 — ‘ using ’ — used it regularly in the classroom H5 — ‘ absorbing ’ — sustained use . |
9 | He held it out in the servant 's direction and let it go . |
10 | She had the few pounds from her wages ( and thank heaven she had not thrown it back in the vicar 's face ) . |
11 | That 's a tricky corner too turns it back in an Agnew 's header and Speedy has turned it in . |
12 | The hurdles in the dissemination race are : H0 — ‘ seeing ’ — saw advertisement H1 ‘ getting ’ — obtained material H2 — ‘ browsing ’ — learned to drive the program H3 — ‘ trying ’ — used it once in the classroom H4 — ‘ using ’ — used it regularly in the classroom H5 — ‘ absorbing ’ — sustained use . |
13 | Cathy Foster proved that in the Los Angeles Olympics and is out to prove it again in the Admiral 's Cup . |
14 | This is real wilderness — we met no-one else in a day 's walking . |
15 | Those that stand still could find themselves right in the discounters ' sights . |
16 | This explains the emergence of out-placement counsellors , consultants who specialise in aiding out-of work executives to sell themselves effectively in a buyer 's market . |
17 | But not for long , for they make another pledge by tying themselves together in a cat 's cradle . |
18 | So this morning the fat little chap in the long white coat who was sorting us out in the Dean 's Office said I 'd better come along here for a few days until they got me organized with another partner . |