Example sentences of "[conj] [verb] [not/n't] [pers pn] [verb] [conj] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ And do n't you think that before we go any further it would be helpful to introduce ourselves ? ’ |
2 | But do n't you think that th do n't you think that the fact that the father , I 'm speaking do n't you think that the fact that the father has made a capital settlement |
3 | But do n't you think that gen that Harlow generally has that feeling ? |
4 | Geoffrey , discussions about the Common Market , for example , tend to be carried out using rational arguments based on economics and legal principles , but do n't you think that at the deepest level international relations depend on national characteristics ? |
5 | But do n't you find that it 's an uphill struggle . |
6 | ‘ But do n't you see that Blackbeard might come after us ? ’ she asked . |
7 | Caspar , genuinely appalled , said , ‘ But do n't you know that it 's almost the most dangerous place in the whole of Ireland ? ’ |
8 | Enticing you might be , but do n't you know that variety is the spice of life ? ’ |
9 | But do n't you know whether a solicitor 's going to be here for the committal proceedings today ? |
10 | But do n't he know that his solicitor 's got ta be here for the today ? |
11 | Well I know but did n't you go and buy some from that other shop ? |
12 | Yeah but did n't he say that he was gon na try and Tory party . |
13 | How perceptive he is , but did n't he know that the BBC had already produced it about two years ago with Frank Finlay and Miriam Karlin ? |
14 | But had n't he thought that Spiderglass would save him somehow , plug him in to the endless dance of electrons ? |
15 | But does not he realise that throughout Scotland he and his cronies are seen as a ’ wee parcel of rogues in a nation who were bought and sold for English gold ’ ? |
16 | But does n't it annoy when somebody 's |