Example sentences of "[pron] [adv] [vb base] to [art] [noun pl] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ I always stick to the limits and am not a boy racer , ’ he said . |
2 | I always talk to the ferrets while the muzzles are put in place and try to ensure that they are never frightened . |
3 | I always say to the kids , ‘ Just marry who you fall in love with , as long as you 're happy ’ . ’ |
4 | I 'm Mary , and I usually come to the meetings . |
5 | I now turn to the cases on joint and several debts in other branches of the law . |
6 | I now turn to the merits . |
7 | I now refer to the proposals regarding the repeal of the Coal Mines Regulation Act 1908 . |
8 | I often speak to the farmers in my area and they are seriously concerned about whether they can continue . |
9 | I then move to the deliverances on page one hundred and eighty five . |
10 | ‘ I never listen to the charts at all now . |
11 | Whilst one may argue that it would be wrong to attribute ego-functions to animals in which the id/ego differentiation was difficult to justify because their behaviour was largely under instinctual , preprogrammed control , it is nevertheless true that some mammals — and in particular some higher primates — do seem to show a plasticity of behaviour and an elaboration of activity which clearly point to the beginnings , however primitive , of ego-functions proper . |
12 | all non-closed SPRs referring to all the modules in the package being approved ( not just those which specifically apply to the versions being approved ) |
13 | They resist change because they feel threatened by it and are the ones who constantly refer to the rules and regulations before they will do anything . |
14 | What you just go to the supermarkets and buy a whole of chickens ? |
15 | Individuals have been pictured rather like automatons who simply respond to the dictates of their culture . |
16 | We only go to the pictures but there 's a scene to face every time when she goes home . |
17 | ‘ We only work to the laws which are enforced and are made by Parliament . ’ |
18 | We hardly go to the shops because almost everything is delivered . |
19 | He puts great emphasis on the difficulties of prediction , and urges that where there are rules to which people do in fact adhere for the most part , and which help maintain the social stability required for any kind of good to flourish , we are likely to come nearest to doing what is objectively right ( in terms of its actual consequences ) if we also stick to the rules , but that where the rules , however useful they would be if generally obeyed , are widely flouted we should make a direct judgement of what will have the best consequences . |
20 | We also write to the customers , as I have said . |
21 | We now turn to the findings of the two outer-city community studies , which also show a pattern of reduction of allophony . |
22 | Having reviewed the theory and some descriptions of the impact of technical change in previous decades and centuries , we now turn to the results of current research into the impact of microelectronics-based technology on the work that people are doing today . |
23 | We now return to the processes by which they are formed and consider their impact on freedom of choice . |
24 | We now revert to the iterations for 1 an observe that , for example , c9 of Table 2.7.1.1 is mostly composed of x1 . |
25 | They also extend to the instructions . |