Example sentences of "[pron] [am/are] [v-ing] [adv prt] of [art] " in BNC.

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1 A lot of them are going out of the area , but I think er I 'd imagine that a large majority or a a large proportion certainly would wish to stay in .
2 The success — I am looking out of the window at the thickly carpeted mountainside — comes from the knowledge of shared weakness , the weakness of both men and women in matters of sex and passion .
3 I 'm looking out of the window , putting off the moment when there will be nothing left to find out and all this has to end .
4 What we 've been through in the last few years has brought us a lot closer , and that 's part of the reason I 'm getting out of the rat race of international cricket … certainly for a few years , anyway .
5 In one of the explicit love notes Fiona wrote : I 'm gazing out of the circular window in my office thinking of us .
6 If mirth it was : she heard these sad wails and thought , I 'm laughing out of the wrong side of my mouth …
7 If you are not eligible to be put in if you do n't have a motor car then you 're discounting an enormous number of people who may have motorcycles or motor caravans or , you know , something which is perfectly valid but it invalidates the information that you think you are getting out of the file because you only put in certain perfectly reasonable , groups of er of things and i in , in , in Boots there 's a , there 's a er there 's a a wonderful expression or actually is , is the one I 'm particularly thinking about , you know we , we sell shall we say a million bottles of aspirin a year , it is in fact considerably more than that , and that is perfectly reasonable and valid and mm but in the definition of that we obviously only included what Boots the Chemists sold because that 's all the people who
8 You 're getting out of the street anyway are n't you ?
9 ‘ So you 're going out of the frying-pan into the fire ? ’
10 Always tell her when you 're going out of the room and , when she can understand , that you 'll be back soon .
11 That in itself is a sign that we are coming out of the recession .
12 ‘ I take it we 're opting out of the crime business ? ’
13 And I 'll tell you what the problem is about the Trusts , and I 'll explain why they are opting out of the National Health Service .
14 Cos she 's gone mad and they put it on her , right , and they , they 're holding her and they 're tapping out of the stage sidewards and she 's sort of like going like this , she , she , thinks all these nice men 'll love me and then like at the end of the show you see them , they 're tapping her out of the studio and putting her into a van and she 's still wearing a straight jacket and smiling at you .
15 And although they 're facing out of the wind now , you ought to know that this is n't the usual wind we get here .
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