Example sentences of "[prep] a [noun sg] [pron] [vb mod] know " in BNC.

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1 After a day he will know the names of everyone on the set and he goes to great lengths to make sure we all enjoy ourselves , organising lunches and so on .
2 Because when he told me their name was I thought of a girl I used to know called Louise , but it is n't her
3 So , if we knew that P was the first letter of a word we would know that the second letter could only come from a small group , and that A , E , I , O , and U are the most likely candidates , H and S are less likely but possible , and F and N very unlikely , but not impossible .
4 What he meant was : Did she act like a woman who might know too much about a murdered boy ?
5 I guessed you were from the first , and the fact that you could quite happily and openly go away with him for a weekend everyone would know about confirmed that I was right .
6 As a minimum you should know whether your customer is an individual , a partnership , an incorporated company or something else .
7 And that prediction comes from a man who should know — George Best , who witnessed the brilliant individual goal by Giggs which put United in the driving seat at White Hart Lane .
8 Erm , as we know , Bullitt was a member of the delegation and an intimate of , of Wilson , so the book is er co- authored , so in a sense we should know as we 're paying for , for all of it , because er , obviously , he relied on Bullitt to give him all this biographical information , and er , consequently what you see Freud doing in this in this book is , is er trawling through , as it were , the things that Bullitt told him , that , that Bullitt had found out , to erm , draw a kind of psy psychoanalytic portrait of Woodrow Wilson , that erm , tried to explain his problem , why did he not deliver the goods as it were .
9 Well it is but I mus n't let it annoy me Brenda because in a way he must know what he 's doing .
10 Step this way , and listen to a man who should know all about it …
11 I said that I would come in for every match and sit in the library and deal with questions and enquiries — there was no point in simply having it supervised by a steward who might know nothing about books or history . ’
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