Example sentences of "[modal v] [verb] [prep] [pers pn] in the " in BNC.

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1 If the seller wants a margin , he must stipulate for it in the contractual description .
2 We must organize against them in the wards and in the constituencies to drive this menace out !
3 But in 1348 the Earl of Arundel , who was Warenne 's sister 's husband and sole legitimate heir , petitioned the king to revoke this agreement , for it would ‘ disinherit the petitioner of his right to premises which should descend to him in the event of the death of the earl … without lawful heir .
4 Never mind , I 'll wait for him in the car . ’
5 It 'll do for you in the end . ’
6 Lawrence watched Todorov in training and declared : ‘ We 'll look at him in the reserves against Derby and take it from there . ’
7 So I mean I suppose they 'll look at it in the same kind of way , somebody who 's got managerial , management qualities rather than I suppose people who are interested in the other side of it , the medical side of it , probably , really be geared up to organizing the money side of it would n't they , usually one or the other .
8 As I have said , I 'll go over it in the , in the lecture in more detail , but this is key insight .
9 ‘ Some answer might come to you in the middle of the night , and if it does n't , you can tackle Faye about it tomorrow . ’
10 But those wo n't , er if we were to take cashing those in now , it would be probably taking half of what we might get for them in the future , and from a business proposition , there is a time , when even if you have money in the bank , there are times , when it would be very advantageous to take long term interest rates , at low interest rates , and I think er er this is er perhaps the best opportunity that we have .
11 ‘ Well , let's just say that it 's crossed your mind that maybe , maybe if you stay long enough in this place it 'll get to you in the same way as it got to me .
12 They both remained silent , looking at her ; then Aggie said , ‘ She 'll come for you in the mornin' .
13 ‘ We 'll talk about it in the morning , ’ Shirl said .
14 You go in today and we 'll talk about it in the evening .
15 It is sometimes worth telling your audience at the beginning : ‘ Many questions may occur to you in the course of this report .
16 Derek gave me a lift in with the bird and all the equipment and said he 'd stay with me in the classroom in case anything went wrong .
17 Walter Legge liked to tell the story — I think as an example of both your musicianship and your tactical skills — that at the graduation class in Vienna you chose the Overture to Rossini 's Guillaume Tell and then sent everyone away except the cellos so you could show exactly what you could do with them in the opening bars of the piece .
18 Likewise , Mr Clark has had to explain that his remark to Mr Lamont ( ‘ I can see you were n't at Eton ’ ) is derogatory not of the chancellor but of Mr Clark 's alma mater , where ‘ you were surrounded by shits and knew what shits were , the sort of people who could vote against Her in the first round .
19 Determined to shoot one with a really fine head , I decided to spend a night near the mountain-top so that I could hunt for them in the early morning before they lay up for the day .
20 But they 'd get to her in the end .
21 He picked up the wafer of liquid crystal which represented himself and stared at the High Priest 's face , his own , wishing that his own image could confide in him in the same way that the Harlequin had .
22 A woman had sold her home and handed over to her son the £4000 proceeds , on condition that she could live with him in the house he bought with the money .
23 During the Thirties when we were all in the big bands , I remember the really fiery jazz clarinet he used to play with us in the Bag O' Nails , just about the first jazz club in Britain . ’
24 At the back of my mind was the feeling that I would bump into you in the street .
25 He often went out alone , Italian style , and Jeanne would wait for him in the street after the cafés closed .
26 When he left his room , he knocked on the women 's door ; he would wait for them in the small restaurant at the front of the hotel .
27 The body 's mechanism takes over because the logical consequence of that would be to die , and we can see here that there is an arousal of something like eight to ten seconds , and during that period the patient would wake up , probably not sufficient that they would know about it in the morning , and we can see here that the breathing starts again .
28 Alan Middleton has recently moved to Aberdeen with Christian Literature Crusade , pray that he would settle into his new role in that place and that Alan would be open to what God would do through him in the coming months .
29 Yet when it came to negotiation , who would speak to him in the name of France ?
30 If the immigration authorities concluded that Mr Hussain 's assertion that he was undecided as to his long term intentions was pretended rather than genuine , clearly that would weigh against him in the primary purpose issue .
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