Example sentences of "[adv] i [verb] [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Mostly I play with the clean channel on full crunch and the lead channel on 16 .
2 Luckily I lived at the higher end of the village so my house was not affected .
3 Interestingly enough I looked into the same situation in America and Germany and in all three mighty industrial countries six out of the top ten firms had gone .
4 Only I know of the old door hidden behind a crumbling shed .
5 But not so much I think er with a lot of henhouses and that they were better battened down I think after the first year .
6 There 's Albert he er , as though we down I expect up the other side .
7 When I first went to work , I went and joined the union , there was n't one in the factory I was working in and so I went to the nearest er trade union office and joined .
8 So I looked at the two men again .
9 So I go on the same as er , weeks two to four an analysis written , and , or drawn or made of examples on one of these themes .
10 So I walked down the steep corridor to the huts that looked outwardly like the huts of both my TV hospital and the real one forty years ago .
11 So I walked to the last bench what seated three pupils , I said , there it is look it 's stuck about three inch .
12 So I walked alongside the quiet , still canal .
13 So I paid for the electric motor of the engine to be serviced , but it never worked very well .
14 before so I lent them , so he 's gone in I go by the same time as him we both got ta sign them
15 Meanwhile I sit in the spacious bar-restaurant , in this drool parlour , in this fancy vomitorium .
16 Tonight I sat in the tiny living room of a schoolmaster 's house in Mufakose , one of Salisbury 's African townships .
17 As I left , if you remember , you were kind enough to invite me to get in touch with you at once if I had any problems , and as soon as we were outside I suggested to the young man that I should indeed wait and continue our talk at some later point in the morning .
18 I mean normally er this morning for instance , normally I park on the big car park down near the the river there ,
19 Er the idea was we 'd be able to sell it to people or give it to people depending on whether they had any money or not I suppose by the Green Party .
20 Once more I glanced at the large flour mill , temporarily closed , despite the addition of a new silvery turbine engine to take the place of water power .
21 The more I read of the early months of Nicholas MacMahon the more convinced I became that I too was rearing a prodigy .
22 Then you pull another , and off I go on the straight line Joey Bonanza 's drawn for me .
23 Would you mind desperately if just this once I paid at the other end ? ’
24 Slowly and carefully I swam round the dark walls of the castle .
25 Up and up I go to the third floor .
26 Limply I gazed at the mortal oiliness of the water , in which no creature could prosper , and the dockside crowds of welcome floating and swimming above like tropical fish .
27 Now I 've past the last base and you want me to just run through a minefield okay ?
28 Now I die for the last time .
29 Now I know in the original draft nature conservation interest was mentioned and er I 'd like to hear from North Yorkshire why that factor is taken out of the policy .
30 I want to make a limited point at this juncture , I reserve the right to come back later on , and it 's become three points as a result of the discussion we 've already had , my view on the contribution of the of the greenbelt to the York issue is n't just the setting of the city , it 's the character of the city , and that would include the central city and the historic city , and the need to limit the physical expansion and size of the urban area because of the implications inside the historic city , and that would certainly apply to other cities with greenbelts that I 'm familiar with like York , like er Oxford , which the character suffers from expansion , possibly excessive , Norwich , that considered a greenbelt , and London , if you like that did n't get its greenbelt until we had the character rather drastically altered , so I think it is n't just the setting and how you see the city from the ring road , it 's actually what happens inside the core , the second point I want to make is really for clarification perhaps , er and it relates to the question of allocations between the built up area and the inner edge of the greenbelt , as I understand it all those allocations are already er included in the Ryedale local plan , and are already therefore included in the commitments that we looked at in Ryedale , I do n't think there is a further reserve of spare opportunities that might be used either before or after two thousand and six , that 's certainly my understanding and if anybody was was taking a different view I think that should be clear , and now I come to the one point that I was actually going to raise , erm I think it 's important that in this discussion of the relations between York city and Greater York , that we get a , early on , a clear view of what the requirements are in York , not just its capacity which we 've discussed so far , and a figure of three thousand three hundred seems to be a fairly common currency , but its requirements , and I want to address a particular question to the County Council , which is in my proof , so they 've had as it were four weeks notice of it .
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