Example sentences of "[adv prt] [prep] [adj] [noun sg] [pers pn] [vb mod] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Down in that dip we will be completely out of sight .
2 ‘ When we move over to this scheme it will be perfectly possible for people to pop in and do a module in June , July or August , ’ he said .
3 Somehow he managed to make it fun , the way he made so many things fun , and , now he was either dead or else taken over by some force I could not even begin to understand , there was nothing whatsoever to keep me in the Church .
4 What will the Germans think when they arrive in Glasgow with players still fresh from a ten-week break in the Bundesliga and a legislative system which means that if any of their players has called off from this game they must not play for their club sides next weekend ? ’
5 And if I carry on with this relationship I shall just end up where I was in New York , miserable , unhappy , alone .
6 Before you come up against this situation you will have realised that the manual and ‘ first garments ’ books are intended for the Ms/Mrs/Mr Average Figure .
7 If , as Taylor argues , professional development is closely bound up with personal growth we must question whether it is feasible to talk of institutional development .
8 ‘ Now , Trevor , ’ Derek Carlisle confronted his colleague , ‘ we know that the President of the World faced a demand for higher salaries from our research workers ; that unless he came up with some incentive we would lose the best of those workers ; and that the increased contribution towards marioc manufacture would compete directly for Exchequer funds .
9 When asked how he came up with this figure he could n't quite s remember and his department did n't know , so if you put that to one side .
10 If you are good at expanding functions up to second order you might like to attempt Example 2.5 .
11 Up to that moment it can be in a state evolving smoothly according to the Schrödinger equation , gently and continuously trimming the balance between " here " and " there " .
12 Up to last year we used to collect used postage stamps and then when our dear friend Father Burbage left for Zambia we had to abandon it because we had no idea where they were sent to .
13 Up to last year it would have been justifiable not to show rugby until October .
14 I mean like you 're quite small framed are n't you so , if you went up to ten stone you 'd look huge
15 Up to this stage it will have been fairly easy for them to break off their activities should the occasion demand it .
16 Later on in this chapter you will see how it has helped specific people in their lives , but first I would like to show how the technique can help some of the more common ailments that many people suffer today .
17 and came out of Long Beach we 'll miss it
18 Out of that income he would have put £1,500 per annum back into the firm , so he would have had £6,000 a year to spend or save .
19 It 's like something out of that rubbish they used to put on after Grandstand . ’
20 Out of that dissatisfaction it may be about to build something better .
21 Out of this maelstrom we can select only a few thinkers and those ideas which stand out in retrospect as marking out the major developments and as setting the scene for more recent times .
22 If you could tell me what I 'm getting out of this turmoil I would be pleased to hear it . ’
23 To get out of this trap we must first disobey our parents , no uncommon thing today , but in my day , it really was a very big step and I was too fainthearted to take it .
24 I suppose if I had n't gone back into that room they 'd have found some other way of leaving the message . ’
25 If you can get your book out in reasonable time I can see it being a real winner , and position-wise it wo n't do you any harm , that 's for sure .
26 This comes out in this page we 'll have a look at it in more detail in a minute .
27 In fact , I told him that when I got back from this holiday he must come round and have a meal .
28 Never mind when you get back to other ladder you might get back up again .
29 But while we were there they had several meetings because of course we were going to be demobbed anyway , and the Colonel er of the regiment he had us together and so did the officers , and warned us that when we got back to civilian life we must er beware of these agitators who tried to er create suspicion amongst the troops who were coming back , and telling them that they ought to join er these revolutionary parties .
30 If you did n't get it out at that time it 'd be half past eleven and she 'd lose two hours .
  Next page