Example sentences of "[pos pn] [noun sg] [adv prt] [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | combing my hair out in a darkened room |
2 | My father 's leg , locked solid , has given me my sanctuary up in the warm space of the big loft , right at the top of the house where the junk and the rubbish are , where the dust moves and the sunlight slants and the Factory sits — silent , living and still . |
3 | If Robert came to you and said in his gentle , somehow caressingly placid voice that I had admitted or confessed to him in ‘ obvious distress ’ that I had pushed my penis up between the hired legs of more than one hundred and fifty tarts ( including three on one single day , or two on one single bed ) then you would probably believe him . |
4 | When I was making my mind up about the new housing development I also looked into the possibility of putting some money into that project as well , to give me a bigger commitment in the area , which would help allay people 's fears about it all being a get-rich-quick scheme . |
5 | Fenella was half way down the stairs to meet me before I had my key out of the front door . |
6 | Let me zero my telepathy in on the benign , rumpled and somewhat steatopygous figure of my friend Stu . |
7 | I swung down at the bottom , deciding to go head first , face up , curling my back down into the soft river bed , praying … |
8 | I put my head out of the rear door of the dining car and , looking forward , saw all the passengers climbing upwards into the sleeping cars , with porters following after with their bags . |
9 | But at any rate I can finally dust my hands and put my jacket on with a clear conscience . |
10 | My success up to the present time has been greater than I could have anticipated both as regards obtaining much information that is entirely new as well as in bringing together one of the finest collections that has ever been formed . |
11 | If I have addressed this to the wrong department I 'd be grateful if you would pass my letter on to the appropriate person . |
12 | Then I get up out of the creaking seat and stretch my legs , taking my glass over to the floor-to-ceiling windows which form one wall of the ballroom and look out over the gardens to the railway line and the shore of the loch . |
13 | I picked my book out of the sweet cicely still unread and made my way back to Claro . |
14 | The grammar turned the whole of my stomach over like a huge unwieldy omelette . |
15 | Soon after my mother died Fat Vince took my dad out in a famous fight , by the gents " in the alley when the Shakespeare was young . |
16 | I would no longer take sides with any party … which is my position up to the present day ’ . |
17 | ‘ Think I 'll make my way over to the big house and see how things are going . ’ |
18 | I felt better now and decided to lie my way out of a tricky situation . |
19 | The boredom , the sheer yuk of it swept over me as I pushed my way out of the sick smell of the phone box . |
20 | I take a look in the file as I make my way down to the main entrance . |
21 | On the train , I had been unable to imagine Flaubert ( howling like an impatient dog ? grumbling ? ardent ? ) making the same journey ; now at this point of pilgrimage , the gateposts were no help in thinking my way back to the hot reunions of Gustave and Louise . |
22 | I yawned my way back to the Narrow Neck . |
23 | ‘ I was always hopeful that I would be able to fight my way back into the representative scene but that was the early chance I needed ’ , recalled Roebuck . |
24 | ‘ I knew that I had to be the best at everything if I was to haul my family out of the financial trouble they were in . |
25 | Now I have another week to get my fitness up to the right level . ’ |
26 | ‘ I 'm leaving a picture of my mother up at the front door with a notice saying this woman is not allowed into the theatre , ’ says Margi . |
27 | Britons were at last letting their hair down after the grey years following the Second World War . |
28 | The Group said that a further 20,000 died as a result of their internment out of an overall total of 150,000 NKVD prisoners . |
29 | ‘ His name is Matthew Blake , ’ Mandy informed Charity as they descended the steps from their cabin on to the paved pathway that led to the lodge . |
30 | Members of the Company put their money down on a separate basis for a distinct and limited series of enterprises ; profits from the voyage would be divided in proportion to capital invested , but capital as well as dividends could be withdrawn when the enterprises were complete and all the goods brought back had been sold off . |