Example sentences of "[pron] [noun sg] [verb] [pron] the [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ In the 1950s and 1960s I served my apprenticeship watching what the good caddies did — old Tip Anderson , Tip 's dad , and Little Mac , Dai Rees ' caddie . |
2 | My grandson asked me the other morning , when was I gon na die ? |
3 | THE next leg of my journey takes me the short drive to Regensburg and from there I follow a minor road to Cham , last stop before the German-Czech border post . |
4 | Erm , my mother calls me the eternal student because I tell her that there 's absolutely no way I 'm gon na look for full time employment ! |
5 | A glance at her watch gave her the perfect excuse to leave immediately … |
6 | After seven months in business , 69 Diving are now expanding to enlarge their range to cover everything the individual diver or club could require . |
7 | So far she had not been able to reconcile her desire to keep everything the same and her desire for comfort . |
8 | Her age makes her the ideal candidate for a pension mortgage . |
9 | Had her mother given her the wrong information ? |
10 | Eleven years later the World Federation of the Deaf at the seventh Congress in Washington awarded him an International Solidarity Merit Award , and Gallaudet College , taking advantage of his presence made him the first recipient of a medallion for " outstanding international service to the deaf " , which he received at a special convention attended by the Vice-President of the United States . |
11 | His work affects me the same way — which is why I bought that painting a few years ago . |
12 | A SIX-YEAR-OLD boy died in hospital after being hit by a car while his father taught him the Green Cross Code . |
13 | Unfortunately , Bob Bigg 's Palace career was greatly reduced by a badly broken leg sustained at Newport in February 1937 , which kept him out of first-team action for fully 21 months , and some of the contemporary pundits reckoned that his absence cost us the single promotion place from Division 3 South in 1938–39 . |
14 | He was n't in the sitting-room , so , interested in the house in spite of herself , she started to explore , his absence giving her the perfect right to do so . |
15 | His ear confirmed what the electronic bug had told him shortly before he had entered the suite , namely that there was no sound of movement from within the bedroom , or its adjacent bathroom . |
16 | He kept up the pressure with his shoulder to give himself the widest gap possible . |
17 | He never earned a degree , but an allowance from his mother gave him the financial independence to devote himself to a career as writer . |
18 | Either he was smiling , or the gaunt hollows of his face gave him the daunting appearance of a smile . |
19 | Yeah , tell your Mum to give me the twelve pence , er , er the two P cos erm it was n't , it was n't worth last night . |
20 | If you lack confidence in your ability to give her the right kind of help and comfort , but really want to do so , you have nothing to fear , because this probably means that you are much better equipped for the task than you imagine . |
21 | If you ignore the ‘ whisper ’ of the wheel clamp , then you might choose to twist your ankle to give yourself the same message again . |
22 | We had intended to ask participants in our workshop to consider what the major constructive influences on their own teaching had been , whether training at college , advice from colleagues , intuitions from pupils or their own previous experience as learners . |