Example sentences of "[pron] [prep] [pers pn] in [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | There 's nothing about it in the manifesto . |
2 | They 're locked in here , so she 's gon na get them for me in a minute no worry Is a drink snowball , she thinks It might not be . |
3 | Mum had found them for me in the house at Lochgair . |
4 | ‘ He reminded me about it in the dressing room before the game , and if it 's said you 're not playing with enough desire you 've just got to swallow it and do the best you can . |
5 | He was paving the way to amusing himself with me in the future when Mme Chaillot was out of town . |
6 | The day after Myeni 's warning , Buthelezi distanced himself from it in a statement denying that any decision had been taken to deploy fighters . |
7 | Dr John Curtis , Keeper of the Department of Western Asiatic Antiquities at the British Museum , said yesterday that there was nothing like it in the world . |
8 | A description of the new house was lavish in its praise — ‘ There is nothing like it in the colony . |
9 | Yeah , but if you do n't invite them , tha , I 'll talk to you about it in a minute . |
10 | I 'll tell you about it in the morning . ’ |
11 | Was the Council willing to embark on a major new undertaking in a field in which it had only limited experience , none of it in the validation of teacher education itself ? |
12 | I was particularly taken by a good phrase used by the hon. Member for Hartlepool , who suggested that we should stop using the word ’ joyriding ’ — none of us in the House does so any longer , except in unspoken inverted commas . |
13 | And almost before he had finished speaking , his mouth forced itself over hers in a kiss that was clearly designed to punish her for that last remark . |
14 | He thought he had them with him in the coach when going to the College , but did not see them again . |
15 | It 's better to take them with you in the car rather than consign them to the chilly furniture van . |
16 | The aim will be fulfilled if the teacher 's aid encourages self-help skills and good personal organisation by the pupil rather than doing everything for him in the way of fetching and returning materials . |
17 | We should have something for you in a couple of days . ’ |
18 | Ooh , I 've got something for you in the cupboard . |
19 | I learnt something about it in the past yeah |
20 | But Anne said ‘ Frank , there 's something about you in the paper . |
21 | ‘ If I were to tell you ’ , I said , trying to look each one of them in the eye , which is not an easy thing to do with ninety-odd people , ‘ that Wimbledon was being invaded by alien beings from another planet , you would probably laugh and call me a lunatic . |
22 | You can live something like it in a commuter suburb , where if you have a blazing row with your wife , neighbours will only get to know about it if she tells them . |
23 | There 's something like it in the folklore of just about every culture . |
24 | She 'd come across one like it in a house of ill-repute where it was known as a squirt . |
25 | But she was the first in recent memory — for Gentle the past had a way of evaporating after about ten years — who had conspired to remove everything from him in the space of half a day . |
26 | He wanted to know if I was interested in doing something on it in the magazine . |
27 | Well you do need to if you have them in them in the back now . |
28 | Thereafter she welcomed Paul 's embraces , thrusting herself at him in the way she had ended by doing on their first night . |
29 | Hari pushed past the woman and picked up the boots hugging them to her in a rush of relief . |
30 | It had to be an art that did not separate him from the uncultured poor but was founded in them , gathering them to him in a home of art they could all share , a home that sheltered and consoled ; a warm place . |