Example sentences of "[modal v] [vb infin] walk [adv prt] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | how to handle the nerves , I 'll say right now and half of you may want to walk out of the room . |
2 | ‘ Maybe you should have walked over to Pike and told him that . |
3 | I thought we should have walked down and try and find her . |
4 | The station was only round a few corners — I must have walked round in circles the day before . |
5 | He 'll be busy , and I 'll have to walk around for a whole hour on my own . |
6 | We 'll have to walk back round you know . |
7 | no , by the time I 've get home I 'll have to walk back to school again |
8 | I might have to walk up to the pier to find a bin . ’ |
9 | I could 've walked off with one to eleven there . |
10 | ‘ I 'd like to walk back , ’ he said . |
11 | But I expect that you all want to know how I could do it — how I could have walked in and scooped up this yummy young man from the arms of his loving and lawful wife . |
12 | But Noades revealed that if he had insisted in altering the payment arrangement of his players , they would have been automatically entitled to free transfers and could have walked out and signed for someone else . |
13 | And in fact some of the the erm the that you look at now , could have walked out of a Dickens novel . |
14 | " Did he die almost immediately , or is there any possibility that he could have walked about for a time , even locked the door and set the alarms ? " |
15 | You would n't have thought he 'd have walked out would you ? |
16 | I 'd have walked out . |
17 | Toni gets to work ALEC GILROY may have walked out on the Rovers Return , but 16-year-old Toni Canning is more than ready to take over from Britain 's favourite landlord . |
18 | War may not be an overall preference ( Lenin was particularly fond of Clausewitz 's remark that the aggressor would prefer to walk in and occupy a foreign territory peacefully rather than fight for it ) ; but if it is the most effective way of achieving an aim , it is necessary to pursue it . |
19 | I would 've walked out I think . |
20 | I have recently been released from jail , hate Daisy Chainsaw and would like to walk around American hotels naked . |
21 | In working clothes and boots they would have walked through , but they were wearing Sunday white stockings and thin shoes which they did not want to ruin . |
22 | It was only my threat that stopped him because if his hand had touched me I would have walked out of this house that very minute and I would n't have had to go far . |
23 | This came in January 1991 , with the arrival on the scene of licensed engineer Bob Eatwell , who admits that if he had known of the multitude of technical and administrative problems that he faced , would have walked out of the Rochester workshop , into sanity ! |
24 | The old lady would have walked back to her villa , but Miguel stopped her by closing the door , and insisting that she wait for a golf cart . |
25 | I was contemplating going back to Reggane , but if the map was wrong , then that would mean that I would have to walk back this way . |
26 | With the train stopping about a train 's length beyond the bridge , he knew that he would have to walk back and explain to Gerry and have a look . |
27 | So she was going to the opposite direction actually , and I insisted that I do n't want to take her that long she would have to walk back again . |
28 | And now , having walked all the way across Frizingley in her thin pale blue dress and her dark blue tablecloth cloak she would have to walk back again — and fast — before she froze to death where she stood . |
29 | She would have to walk back in the afternoon sunshine , or find somewhere to rest . |
30 | Again she felt like getting up and leaving — but to do that would mean walking out of her job . |