Example sentences of "[noun sg] [pron] [verb] [pers pn] the [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | During his lunch-hour I give him the last orange , a biro and three lollipops , all I can muster , and wish him a happy birthday . |
2 | In other words , it is the poll tax crossed with a capital value tax — a roof tax crossed with a head tax — a cross-bred monster which gives us the worst of all worlds . |
3 | At the German border we were helped by a German trucker who got us the required stamps . |
4 | One day Tom came to see me and poured out a story which told me the other side of his ambitious , over-achieving self . |
5 | I mean I tried it out at work I show you the this is what they used at work . |
6 | The quartet carries an instrumental arsenal which gives it the necessary weight to produce the ominous , bass-heavy sounds that accompany Max Schreck 's marvellously decrepit , zombie-like portrayal of Count Dracula . |
7 | In 1861 Crookes made the discovery which brought him the necessary eminence ; he identified the new element thallium . |
8 | In response to the unasked question she handed them the last cans . |
9 | ‘ No wonder they call us the black Irish ! ’ |
10 | The same story you told me the last time we met , ’ she said with a sneer . |
11 | Jonathan always thinks that what he says is so fantastic that he 's got to say it twice in case you missed it the first time round . |
12 | The project scientist who sent me the disappointed and sceptical account of all this said that there were shrieks from the store room , but not of success . |
13 | Hailed as the troubled comic genius who gave us the manic hotel-keeper Basil Fawlty and the Ministry of Silly Walks , he 's also the kingpin of the enduring Pythons and a multi-millionaire businessman . |
14 | Er I felt , I 've been after Danny for nearly twelve months to come see and not been able to get him on the night I want him the only night he was able , was available was I think it was one night when we had something else on I ca n't remember what it was . |
15 | The reasons for the widespread development of the particular form of alphabetic literacy evident in Greece must clearly be sought in the social structure ; Goody and Watt , however , insist that ‘ considerable importance must surely be attributed to the intrinsic advantages of the Greek adaptation of the Semitic alphabet , an adaptation which made it the first comprehensively and exclusively phonetic system tor transcribing human speech ’ ( ibid. pp. 40–1 ) . |
16 | Yes , all that rhythm , one day you have it the next you do n't , and er Lawrence has certainly got it today , you can tell by just looking at a bowler running in , if he 's easy and relaxed , Lawrence I suppose never really looks relaxed when he 's belting into bowl , but he 's clicked he 's , he 's right at the crease . |
17 | Oh yeah , I love the , the mixed of border you call it the mixed of border no , yes ? |
18 | They agree that theological discourse does not make sense in the terms of ordinary language , but whereas for one this effectively consigns theology to the dustbin , for the other it gives it the same sort of status as speaking in tongues . |
19 | It comes to us from the age which gave us the Great Charter , and founded the House of Commons . |
20 | This is a combined account for borrowing and saving which gives you the automatic right to borrow money . |
21 | Boston ( 1086–1113 ) too is a planted town , its plan related to the curving banks of the River Witham along which came the trade which made it the second most prosperous town after London by 1206 . |
22 | It was Nanny who told me the rotten news . |
23 | Morality and religion open the door to oppression but in focusing so sharply on the woman 's role they make her the central symbol of the culture . |
24 | The poem which gives us the best insight into knightly and aristocratic life c. 1200 , L'Histoire de Guillaume le Maréchal ( the story of William Marshal ) , rarely fails to tell us how much a particular horse was worth : it could be as much as forty , fifty or even a hundred livres — and this at a time when a serf could be bought for ten livres . |
25 | But the man who gives us the clearest picture of the link between the Spirit and evangelism is St. Luke in his two volume work . |
26 | A lonely childhood , a youthful longing for adventure , made it easy enough for Dick to lay aside his devotion to an almost legendary father and to dedicate himself to the service of a man who gave him the emotional security and incentive he had lacked for so long . |
27 | Phrasal verbs come in for more attention with Phrasal Verbs Organiser from LTP ( by the man who gave us the First Certificate Organiser ) , while HarperCollins is publishing a Phrasal Verbs Workbook to accompany its dictionary . |
28 | It is God as Spirit who brings us the intimate presence of God to us , enabling us to be friends of God . |
29 | North of Dunkery Beacon , for example , the well-preserved ringwork of Sweetworthy is next to the abandoned medieval farm site — and possibly the Saxon predecessor which gives us the -worth element in Sweetworthy . |
30 | It sounds to me with me being they got him the first the the their victims . |