Example sentences of "[unc] [noun] [vb -s] [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 The er deputy goes in to the district and he he gives an insurance er by law that that the district is safe .
2 The area cost adjustment which the er government takes out of the total S S A's of some two hundred million has gone to the south-east , I hope none goes to Westminster , and that has cost us one point three million .
3 When our marketing er executive goes round to the surgery one of the one of the things erm he he or she will determine with the with the practice is the number of booklets we 're going to print .
4 More often than not , the producer 's money comes out of the artist 's record company royalty payment .
5 In another account of youth work , Hubert Secretan rehearsed the same complaint : ‘ Every boy 's sympathy goes out to the lithe and resourceful crook …
6 Much of the Bible 's teaching goes back to the way we are made ; it goes back to creation itself .
7 McDunn 's mouth twists down at the edges ; he sucks through his teeth , and for some reason I feel encouraged .
8 Weirdest of all is the studio , in which a Madame Tussaud 's waxwork stares out of the half-light at you from behind the control-room glass .
9 The bag opens and the ‘ swag ’ from the previous night 's job spills on to the pavement : gold candlesticks , war trophies and silverware .
10 Equation ( 5.7 ) uses rm to discount the bond 's cash flows back to the next coupon payment and then discounts the value at that date back to date t .
11 Caroline , Freddie 's wife , looks rather like him , except that whereas Freddie 's smile disappears up round the right-hand side of his face , hers goes up to the left .
12 HAS-BIN : Fergie 's head goes out with the rubbish yesterday at the waxworks Pictures : ANDREW STENNING
13 As we shall see more clearly after studying Chaucer 's other fabliaux and uses of fabliau , the Shipman 's Tale stands out as the particular instance when Chaucer uses a fabliau to place fabliau in a critical light , examining fabliau as an extant genre rather than exploiting it for some other purpose .
14 The high perspective is indulged for the space of one couplet , before Leapor 's muse tumbles back into the world of work .
15 It remains to be seen how Taggart 's vision stands up to the floodlights — and the driving rain .
16 But for such degenerates as Cade , or these two , Shakespeare can also deprive his prose of rhythm , make it flaccid , shapeless , a difficult mouthful to get out : Caliban 's verse stands out with the greater force , cured as he now is of his delusions : But — so at least the juxtaposition suggests — that is in part the judgement that verse can make over prose .
17 The King 's bust looks out from the obverse ; the reverse carries an abbreviated version of Charles ' declaration to ‘ defend the Protestant religion , the liberties of Parliament and the laws of England , ’ together with his prayer for ‘ the scattering of the enemies . ’
18 WHAT is the protocol at a smart lunch when one 's neighbour drops off during the speeches ?
19 Northampton 's history goes back beyond the Romans — certainly to the Iron Age and settlements of that time can be found in and around the town .
20 Croatia 's acceptance follows on from the recent announcement that the Baltic states of Estonia , Latvia and Lithuania has been reinstated to their former status as full members , a status that they enjoyed prior to the outbreak of the second world war .
21 In other words , I mean I 'm retired and I mean the point is that my erm experience goes back into the er into the dark ages I can almost say because in these days , you probably realise , I mean if anybody buys a video you do n't ask you do n't look for the book of instructions you ask about a five year old kiddy how to programme it !
22 the solicitors ' profession goes back to the courts of the 15th century , and to this day a solicitor 's full title is ‘ Solicitor of the Supreme Court of England and Wales ’ .
23 the solicitors ' profession goes back to the courts of the 15th century , and to this day a solicitor 's full title is ‘ Solicitor of the Supreme Court of England and Wales ’ .
24 The solicitors ' profession goes back to the courts of the 15th century , and to this day a solicitor 's full title is ‘ Solicitor of the Supreme Court of England and Wales ’ .
25 The solicitors ' profession goes back to the courts of the 15th century , and to this day a solicitor 's full title is ‘ solicitor of the Supreme Court of England and Wales ’ .
26 The solicitors ' profession goes back to the courts of the 15th century , and to this day a solicitor 's full title is ‘ Solicitor of the Supreme Court of England and Wales ’ .
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