Example sentences of "[conj] [adv] they [verb] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The standard wines from the estate are not to be sniffed at — or rather they repay careful nosing , especially the unusually ripe but fresh and balanced Pinot Blanc ( £5.49 ) , and the highly perfumed Muscat ( £6.99 ) .
2 Were were would you suggest that they have a lot of unresolved feelings about that , or maybe they had emotional scars because no-one was there to give them the kind of hope that might be available now ?
3 And things like Time Out and so on , and City Limits , tried on the listings in the culture front seem to be seduced by , on the one hand , the need to simply provide information in terms of the listings , or then they felt some kind of twinge of conscience and had to be counter-balanced by radical politics on the other side , which produced a completely split , a paper that you could tear in half and read it as two sort of separate things , and erm and they always erm and something like that always felt
4 V.W. Yes , I mean that 's something that when I first started I would n't have said , but I 've seen over the last six years changes in the governors and the role of the governors and I sense very much so that now they want Catholic appointments .
5 The 80386-80486 translator is the latest to be finished after the original Transputer implementations and Hinsley says that now they have first couple under their belts , it will only take a month or two to write each additional processor implementation .
6 The 80386–80486 translator is the latest to be finished after the original Transputer implementations and Hinsley says that now they have first couple under their belts , it will only take a month or two to write each additional processor implementation .
7 off the grant , so that actually they get six weeks money less , through the year , than they should do , where they 're used to paying all through year
8 However we evaluate the two styles morally — and we may certainly want to agree that supportiveness is a positive good — it is evident that instrumentally they have political consequences .
9 Er , and eventually they took that tune from a melody from a Haydn 's string quartet .
10 Cos basically they have these sort of kiddies all these activities and you just help you help out .
11 And so they made two provisions which make the situation rather different .
12 And so they put three sets of converters in .
13 be because leaders want power and they get power and so they want more power .
14 If only they had some grenades of the gas or choke or knockout variety !
15 Their views are readily recognizable in a world where the fuss about the Turin Shroud has reminded us of a time when high hopes and claims of miracle were commonly attached to pieces of the true cross or heads of John the Baptist , where much Christian literature promises believers great success in life if only they have enough faith in God , and where men and women of political power still try to have God and his Church on their side , and to use their authority to enhance their own .
16 You have one on each leg erm and one erm on the bridle and apparently they use special tools that er hobble the mare and stop her moving , so she has n't got any choice and when they lead the stallion in , they got these five guys there erm with these various tools and they make , hold the mare still to make sure the stallion can mount , because apparently very often the mares wo n't have it and th they kick or they walk away .
17 John quickly became intimate friends with Mr Huddlestone , the general manager of the Winter Gardens complex , and together they produced more scenes and numbers during the summer season and well into the autumn .
18 He gathered a considerable following of loyal and disaffected men , and together they served many masters , both Christian and Moslem , during the next five years .
19 The old thief rambled on and together they completed another circuit of the perimeter path .
20 Childbearing makes women dependent and thus they have less access to such freedom .
21 There were no strike pay , you just had a promissory note that er if ever they got any money they 'd pay you , you see ?
22 If ever they make Maundy Thursday a holiday of course then there are jobs in which it will be the norm to go home on Wednesday lunchtime .
23 And still they treat this house like a hotel —
24 With fertilisers the same crops can be grown year after year on the same fields and still they give high yields .
25 And also they wanted harsh decisions to be taken in respect of their effects on industry .
26 ‘ He needed his students to have books , though , ’ bellowed Mr Varley , ‘ and now they cost twenty quid a time — twenty quid a time , that 's what they cost . ’
27 And now they have mental powers that allow them to surpass physical laws . ’
28 And now they have another LP .
29 They were hanging around town when they met and now they see each other about five times a week .
30 That was the Labour party 's half decade of debt and now they plan another £37 billion worth of expenditure .
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