Example sentences of "[noun sg] [verb] [verb] [adv] [adv] [conj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Er , but in the long run we 're on the lookout to continue to build both organically and by acquisition where appropriate er , on , on the main sectors . |
2 | This bodily preparation needs to occur so quickly that there is no time for conscious thought , the caveman does not have time to talk himself into this state of readiness . |
3 | SCOTLAND 'S industrial base has shrunk so dramatically that there are almost as many people unemployed as working in manufacturing , previously unpublished figures showed yesterday , writes Joy Copley . |
4 | ‘ Social imperialism ’ suggests that the main beneficiaries of this policy were British consumers , and indeed one writer has gone so far as to argue a direct link to the Attlee government 's social reforms : ‘ The nationalisations , medical provision and expansion of education so magnanimously legislated by the Labour Ministry were largely achieved because the Bank of England kept the Sterling Area show on the road . ' |
5 | I think that 's why the play has survived so long because it has this peculiar charm . ’ |
6 | Moreover , the North American Securities Administration Association has gone so far as to accuse the South Pacific micro-states of Nauru , Vanuatu , Tonga and the Marshall and Northern Mariana Islands of being ‘ international centres of prostitute banking ’ . |
7 | Kevin McKenna , from Manchester Wythenshaw , said : ‘ No industry has failed as comprehensively as the prison industry . |
8 | I have been lucky that my condition has progressed more slowly than is often the case . |
9 | As the years unfold , the penny will drop in the general council of the CBI , as much as on the commuter trains from Basildon , that the whole market-based experiment has gone as far as it can — and the new need is for a government and policies that actively manage the instability and short-termism of the British economy . |
10 | If the applicant has survived this far and avoided a pre-hearing assessment , the case will be listed for hearing . |
11 | Our business investment has increased more rapidly than in any other major economy except Japan . |
12 | Do hope term has gone quite well and that you 're not too tired . |
13 | You have already noticed in your SAS practice of up-to-time sentences that sometimes the mouth seems to open more noticeably than at others . |
14 | The domain-specific dictionary appears to perform slightly better than the general dictionary . |
15 | Culpeper advised it as being " very effectual for all pains in the head coming of a cold cause " , and modern research seems to indicate fairly conclusively that chewing the fresh leaves daily has considerable help in curing migraine . |
16 | No one would have constructed them in the form they have if he had not known that at all costs he must , when it comes to experimental predictions , obtain those same results which the statistically interpreted Schrödinger equation seems to produce so economically and naturally . |
17 | Mummy led Bully as far as the starting-place for her , then handed the rope-lead to Angela . |
18 | Many ringsiders felt the 22-year-old from the Mount Tallant Club had won quite convincingly and there was quite a few surprised faces when the final scoring was announced . |
19 | One afternoon a nurserymaid from the castle had appeared with Richard , and her distress had melted as quickly as it had grown . |
20 | The French negotiators had very little leverage , because their president had indicated so often and so publicly his determination to reach an agreement as soon as possible . |
21 | Furthermore , some branches of physical geography had proceeded as far as they could without an enhanced knowledge of processes . |
22 | In the meantime , my father 's condition had grown neither better nor worse . |
23 | The car remained crowded as far as Holborn and then the passengers thinned out . |
24 | Enya plans to tour here soon while Leo and his wife , Baba , are hoping to take a holiday in Cleveland . |
25 | As the whole system is headed by a man , it is likely that the village has to move more frequently than if it were headed by a woman . |
26 | The ballerina has to behave as graciously and confidently as her partner . |
27 | For the investor , however , multiplicity creates opportunity , and the next Bookish Portfolio stands to prosper so long as the creative process is allowed to flower . |
28 | The NUS has announced a radical set of new voting rules that the ruling executive committee hopes to introduce as soon as possible . |
29 | In his usual thrusting manner , he fought inside McLaren to get the engine put to use as soon as possible , knowing full well that engine development on a bench or in testing is very different to developing an engine that will be competitive under the stress of FI racing . |
30 | She had never been pushed academically , although there is no doubt she had the intelligence to have done far better than she ever did . |