Example sentences of "[Wh adv] they [vb base] [verb] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 These processes turn out to be as widely varying as the tasks upon which they are to be used , and we are therefore only in the very beginning stages of understanding how they combine to predict emerging skills .
2 So we think of them as being descriptive , but in reality , if you 're going to say to somebody , you 're very responsible , they 're probably not going to know what you mean , unless you come up with a few examples of what you 're talking about , of how they 've demonstrated that type of behaviour .
3 I mean is it like how they 've done various singles in the past , Cliff Richard and ‘ Summer Holiday ’ , you know putting a little voice on top , a little snippet .
4 An account of how they come to have communicative significance , and different communicative significances , can be given in terms of the flouting of the maxim of Quantity .
5 Work work with your pair , erm , for now , and overnight , what we 'd like you do is , obviously decide for yourself your strategy , but also if you can brief your other half , as to how they need to play that role , to get you the best opportunity of practising the skills .
6 Just how they manage to tread this highwire of deft abandon must be due , in part , to excellent artistic direction but in the main to superb dance skills .
7 Compare your findings together , asking your friend to explain how they have noticed these aspects of your personality in practice , and what they consider the most destructive , damaging elements in what they have described ( if any ) and why .
8 Ideally reflection will : raise the status of the children 's contributions draw significance from the work help the children understand the meanings in their work , and how they have used dramatic forms to create those meanings move the drama forward — both in terms of the narrative and the quality of learning .
9 In this case , note that the essay goes on , The aim is not to apportion blame but to uncover the origins of racial stereotyping and how they have permeated English Literature .
10 However , once Governments of either party know that they will complete a Bill on a certain day , they hand much of the power over to the Opposition to decide how they want to use that time to debate the proper timing and clauses .
11 Social services authorities will be expected to make clear in their community care plans what steps they will be taking to make increased use of non-statutory service providers or , where such providers are not currently available , how they propose to stimulate such activity .
12 Constant hum , people started from the first day and they 've been flowing through ever since with a high point at the weekend when they 've had more time to come up to London to have a look at things look at things .
13 We shall have Bryan Robson and Lee Sharpe mush fitter in a few weeks when they have had more games . ’
14 Here cycle tracks may be taken from road space , but as they are delimited only by markings they are available for cars to pull into when they need to pass oncoming traffic .
15 So there must be lots of people of my age whose feet are like that , where they 've worn these things and their feet are a bit deformed .
16 it 's where they 've had that porch built up .
17 A great deal of very useful research can be carried out wholly from documentary sources of one kind or another , but often social researchers find themselves in a position where they want to investigate social behaviour on which there is very little published research or perhaps what research has been published is not relevant enough to their own particular areas of interest .
18 Tourists that take them back they have the label on the box to say where they have purchased this cheese .
19 Hardship allowances are paid as compensation to those expatriates relocated to countries where they have to face greater discomforts or difficulties than they would normally experience at home : climate , unstable political environments , isolation , separation from children , poor sanitation , and so on .
20 Er yes well that is so this did come through er very very late indeed er in the and the Parish Council of course are in the situation where they have to cover all eventualities and what er Mr is referring to is a suggestion of using a one O six agreement to protect as far as possible the local communities when the tip is erected .
21 That 's the first and they 'll be the ones that will be able to tell you why they 've taken that decision and why we say it 's a reasonable decision .
22 cos I do n't know why they 've got blooming queues in fish shop
23 its not , you ca n't , the thing is you ca n't defend them without how you die , you ca n't train people how to avo to die , you can only train them how to avoid it , so it does n't really matter if you get fired or not , but they show you the drills and you have to do them to the best of your ability the blank rounds are only there to the conditions , now this is why they 've got these laser got laser sights all over the body , helmet and torso and the actual weapons got a laser on top and you get , if you get near one of these things you go dead and your out , and you can actually simulate
24 Since then a program 's been written called Database One which means something completely different which has been updated to Database Two and Three and may be Four , which mean different things , that 's why they 've got different numbers , they do more clever things and nowadays you talk , you hear people talking about databases and they all mean different things .
25 We have My Lords still had no serious explanation from the Government as to why they have brought this proposals forward .
26 One of the things they do tend to do is upset cells , upset the way cells replicate , which is why they start doing weird things and go off and get cancerous .
27 Where G Ps are at liberty to refer their patients wherever they want to refer those patients .
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