Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] [prep] [pers pn] [prep] the " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | He was one of 4 youths who attacked jogger , Paul Lanighan because he accidently bumped into them in the street . |
2 | Passionate with indignation at the poverty and injustices which he daily met around him in the industrial north of Bradford , he sought , and was able to gain from , J.P.M. 's National Council of Labour Colleges , that knowledge which served him so well throughout his short working life , as a weapon with which to fight and change the capitalist system which tolerated and perpetuated such inhumane living conditions . |
3 | Church and state , religion , law , prejudice , custom , tradition , greed , lust , hatred , injustice , selfishness , ignorance , and arrogance have all conspired against her under the sexual rule of the human male . |
4 | I 've only heard of it at the fashion college . |
5 | There is a general expectation that people will not remember detailed facts correctly if they are only exposed to them in the spoken mode , especially if they are required to remember them over an extended period of time . |
6 | The Butcher remained a vivid memory because , apart from my ordeal , I was constantly remanded of him by the dangerous wobbling of my pipe at the edge of that needless gap in my mouth . |
7 | Despite its boulevards in the north , the city was never as monotonous as the centre of Paris after Baron Haussmann had really got down to work on it in the 1860s . |
8 | That conflict of views has its fierce advocates on both sides , and I am neither well informed nor dispassionate enough to comment on it From the presumed perspective of John Howard , the Ellis-Beto administrations overall emerge with credit , because they did insist on the publication of official rules , and that was a big breakthrough . |
9 | Anwar had reclaimed Changez and was patiently explaining to him about the shop , the wholesaler and the financial position . |
10 | I can remember only walking beside her in the dusk towards Regent 's Park , because we both wanted darkness and to be alone . |
11 | Had he not , through the magnetic influence he was able to exert even over those of his own race , personally seen to it at the Peace Conference that these Arabs were not sent unrewarded away ? |
12 | It took many months more for me to feel safe enough to talk to him about The Fat Controller , but there came a time , when the memory of our last vertiginous encounter had dimmed , that I became prepared to risk it . |
13 | Mr Calvert was n't fit enough to talk to us about the bookings . |
14 | It is notable too that this liberal interpretation is proposed by the jurist , and merely adopted from him by the emperor . |
15 | To talk about God to starving men is simply a waste of time for to them God is bread ; he can only appear to them as the bread of life . |
16 | It deals with pains like appendicitis , coley cystitis , which is inflammation of the gall bladder — about nine different diseases — and it merely says to you at the end of the operation based on the last five or six hundred patients I 've seen , the probability of this patient having appendicitis is ninety per cent , the probability of something else being ten per cent . |
17 | it 's still the first one , she 's got a billion things to do , we 'll obviously speak to her in the autumn , erm |
18 | Hayling was also in charge of media initiatives , so Lowe naturally turned to him with the newspaper they had so often discussed as comrades in Big Flame . |
19 | ‘ Not the usual kind of student 's flat , ’ muttered the Marshal , surprised to find his feet walking on fitted carpet , a thing that only happened to him in the lobbies of hotels he was checking on . |
20 | A lot of humans had been in to look at him in the last few minutes . |
21 | I think you 'd better work with me for the next few days , or if I 'm not here , then with one of my staff nurses . |
22 | His Prince Hal is never a roaring boy : he sits hunched or sprawled , with dark unwinking eyes : he hopes to be amused by his bully companions , but the eyes constantly muse beyond them into the time when he must steady himself for the crown . |
23 | The booming surf far below called to her like the beat of a jungle drum . |
24 | I do not have the room to articulate this opposition here , but only to point to it via the already observed generalising tendency in de Man 's thought . |
25 | Even the governor comes down to hobnob with me in the cells . " |
26 | Getting the weans in to sleep with them in the Kingsize and of course will they move back to their bunkbeds once He 's back ? |
27 | Frigidity has only been better exemplified to me by the first psychotic woman I ever saw , who complained that her vagina contained a block of ice . |
28 | With any luck , it should not need much doing to it over the next few years . |
29 | And so , to the dhobis astonishment and terror , the Collector had suddenly materialized beside him at the water-trough . |
30 | For him it held a special appeal ; the one day of the week he could break bread with his family and not have to feel that they were only loaned to him for the while — his son Joshua had no business to go to , his grandson Jacob no college lectures . |