Example sentences of "[pron] [adv] [prep] a [noun] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | When , and only when , the paper and the paint have completely dried , I emphasise the highlights by rubbing over them gently with a typewriter eraser , the variety which can be sharpened to a point to increase accuracy . |
2 | When , and only when , the paper and the paint have completely dried , I emphasise the highlights by rubbing over them gently with a typewriter eraser , the variety which can be sharpened to a point to increase accuracy . |
3 | With the playback that in fact erm as has said it showed me what in fact I was doing right and wrong , erm I 've been on television before once when I was running the London marathon but this time it was actually me and me alone in a work element and I could in fact see what I was doing and why I was doing it and understand in fact the corrections from the morning to in fact the afternoon presentation when I came back for the second one . |
4 | He lowered himself gingerly to a gilt chair and stirred his coffee , the spoon circulating slowly until it finally stopped and he sat staring at it . |
5 | Lennox also hit back at critics , who claim he should have avoided the dangerous Ruddock and hidden himself away for a world title shot , snapping : ‘ I know the British fight fans will respect me for going in against the best instead of facing an easy touch . |
6 | and , and if she 's already scared of his temper and they 've not even lived together , well they have lived together for quite a while actually so I mean it 's not like they do n't know each other but once they 're married and they 've been married for a couple of years I reckon , and he starts thinking of her more as a possession sort of thing I can , I can really imagine |
7 | In 1867 he became minister to the Borough New synagogue , south London , a post which he combined with a variety of Jewish and non-Jewish charitable and philanthropic endeavours , whilst busying himself also as a prison visitor . |
8 | Electronics specialist or not , he regarded himself primarily as a classicist and– indeed , he was totally fluent in reading and writing both Latin and Greek . |
9 | This seems to them more like a building site than a City office . |
10 | Evening : invited me home to a buffet meal with a group of friends and colleagues , including , ( Linguistics CIEFL ) , ( Linguistics CIEFL ) , ( Correspondence Course , CIEFL ) , ( Materials Production , CIEFL ) . |
11 | I delighted them once with a return invitation to dine at The Pightle . |
12 | ‘ She treats me more like a father figure , ’ David said . |
13 | Payslips are produced and sent to you together with a payroll report for management information and audit purposes . |
14 | She believes that Hewlett-Packard has now carved itself enough of a breathing space to be able to consider various options at both ends of the market . |
15 | She believes HP has now carved itself enough of a breathing space to be able to consider various options at both ends of the market . |
16 | THE BBC was bracing itself yesterday for a Government onslaught over its election coverage , which many ministers believe was biased against the Conservatives . |
17 | I 'm afraid I have n't a spare copy to forward to you even on a loan basis , one never allows for the contingencies which arise . |
18 | By unilaterally adopting the programme , with its commitment to wide-ranging economic sovereignty for the individual republics , Russia placed itself potentially on a collision course with the USSR administration should the latter not follow suit . |
19 | She never for a moment thought of deserting French for Mrs Hill , having encountered amongst other things some nasty problems about the nature of electricity , but she did enjoy the sensation of flirtation : she spent a long time making her mind up , and finally was summoned by the headmistress , who told her she ought to stick to Sciences , because they offered better prospects . |
20 | Those are the two players who definitely from a confidence point of view need to score . |
21 | The canonising of many of these into ‘ sainthood ’ , and its corresponding condition within non-Christian religions puts them temporarily into a surrogate position relative to the Created God , which is similar to that into which Jesus Christ may be put . |
22 | If we sign an act without a record contract , we develop their music and their image so we can present them favourably to a record company . ’ |
23 | She washed a Cos lettuce , leaf by leaf , then patted each of them carefully with a tea towel . |
24 | At this time of year cuttings wilt rapidly , so pop them straight into a polythene bag and prepare them as soon as possible . |
25 | They reflect money balances and just as a mirror image shows everything literally as a mirror image , everything is the opposite way round , so too are the balances in the mirror accounts in relation to the balances in the NOSTRO and VOSTRO accounts . |
26 | Yes , between eight and a half to nine , we just in a dogs life a year , is seven of ours . |
27 | And any ‘ green shoots of recovery ’ may well be choked by the tares of something close to a world slump . |
28 | I made one yesterday in a meat tin and so Lynn had a lump and I got a lump and you here . |
29 | We would have to pack up everything carefully on a Saturday night and travel on a Sunday . |
30 | let me ask you something else on a development Mr I when I watched use the er help from time to time there are major items of expenditure , after the properties built , correct |