Example sentences of "[conj] [pron] [vb base] [adv prt] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Is n't this where you line up for the tram coming home from work ? ’
2 Coming in in the corners where the where you go out on the landing .
3 I do n't know what it 's called but there 's this bit where you go down on the floor like an anteater .
4 Spike : Another word for the smash , where you jump up by the net and whack the ball down with your hand .
5 Where you start down at the estbottom and build it right up to the goddamn , fuckin' sky ! ’
6 Often , if they have a disposition to broader problem-solving , the search consultant can provide views on several issues : the potential organisational structure ; how the individual would fit in ; the likely scope of his or her responsibilities ; if the tasks he or she will be set are manageable and possibly whether candidates can be found in the market who meet a particular specification ; whether the search can be a UK-based search or needs to be international ; whether any of the top candidates can be attracted for the remuneration or does the remuneration of the senior team need reviewing ; is the nationality of the candidate important ; could a woman do the job ; what happened to the last job holder ; did he or she move on to a bigger job or was he or she fired , and was that person successful in the role ?
7 Yet , given the opportunity and some imaginative presentation , the urban population has shown that it is capable of responding , judging by the numbers who take an interest at county shows or who turn up at the pitifully few farms which organize public open days .
8 This type of alteration is called saussuritisation , and other similar types of hydrothermal alteration can be recognised in the other igneous rocks of the igneous complex of south Harris where they crop out in the thrust zone .
9 They scream in horrifying agony , and thick gouts of blood spray over anyone in the area as the meats fly with a squelch into roasting-trays on the tables , where they flop about for a few minutes like dying animals .
10 Sometimes a head-on collision with a lorry seems inevitable , but somehow at the last moment we or they swerve out of the way .
11 or they turn up at the gates and go shit Mr like the headmaster 's on the door and my nipples are in and they go hang on I 've got some ice cubes here , put them on and they come out and er they go by the nipples , your nipples are looking good today .
12 And although I move on in the final chapter to consider some of the policy implications of the analysis , the main aim will be to clarify rather than prescribe .
13 ‘ It 's not very often that I come down from the pulpit but I feel this would be a genuinely worthwhile exercise , ’ he said .
14 erm , you have , I have n't , and erm , there was a photograph that I cut out of the paper sometime before he abdicated , over the Prince of Wales at the races with Mrs Simpson .
15 The figures that I quoted were given in a written answer to a question that I put down about the cutbacks in regional preferential assistance .
16 The only person that I know about at the playhouse is Gordon .
17 So good am I that I turn round on the runners to photograph Tony .
18 But on the other hand , the bibliography for the Tate catalogue required that I look back at a lot of old notices and I find that my perception was not at all valid .
19 So flustered was I , in fact , that I became entangled with the bicycles in the hall ( my sons always keep them there , and other things being equal I usually get past them without too much difficulty ) , and I arrived in the dining-room even more distraught than I set out from the study .
20 I decide to play it safe , so I tackle up with a ¼oz bullet stopped only 1½ inches from the number 4 hook .
21 But that alone did n't daunt my spirit , so I set off on the second day with a little more trepidation but just as much determination to learn to sail .
22 I du n no what to do now so I go up to the big electric sign board and have a look at it .
23 I find some steps , so I go down into the park and have a wander round .
24 A steady pressure tries to pull my finger to the rod , so I go along with the movement for a few inches and then strike .
25 I du n no what to do , so I go back to the caff and have a look in the window .
26 They are pulled away impatiently by Bill , so I sit back on the side lines .
27 back home , so I carry on down the road .
28 Once I get on to a good thing I keep it going until I run out of luck .
29 We can bring you back at home or if they insist that you go back in an ambulance , you may , they may not put you back home you know , have you thought of that ?
30 okay , round the base of your thumb , basically what we want to do is we want to clamp these fingers in so they ca n't come un unstuck , we want to push them together because she ca n't keep them shut like that , but the next thing is that you come round to the back where the little finger is , the next time you come round here , you 're gon na come round to about the first thumb joint okay and then you 're gon na go over the top okay and if you come round again the little thumb , by , by the little finger , you come round again to the thumb joint okay , come over the top again , round , we 're just making really like the figure of eight , but all the time we 're keeping off of this wrist here and I 'm keeping her fingers in , are you alright still ?
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