Example sentences of "[prep] [pers pn] [pron] [vb mod] [vb infin] [adv prt] " in BNC.
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1 | Between them they will pick up an aggregate £1.9m to cover early termination of their service agreements . |
2 | Then you can write a piece for me which will point out the problems , without declaring that they are insoluble short of a social revolution . |
3 | ‘ When I left it was open ended so that if things did not work out for me I could go back to playing Charlene . |
4 | " If you 'll nobbut stop runnin' after 'em they 'll settle down . |
5 | The curving windows at the stern are freckled with spray ; through one of them you can make out a set of fat capstans and a listless macaroni of sodden rope . |
6 | So some of them you can work out buy if you know what a transformer does , it steps down all of the current , it reduces the voltage . |
7 | Exercise 1 : Try playing the children 's party game where you spend two minutes looking at an assortment of small items on a tray , then cover them with a cloth and see how many of them you can write down . |
8 | And I would dare those of you who would look up the newspaper clippings of that occasion and challenge that view , because you would find a much different reading in those newspaper clips than what I learnt many years later , trudging round the island , Personally I thought that I was being particularly clever bombing a seaplane that was taking off , It was only when I was serving on Sylt in the fifties that I learned that this was in fact a tug ( or you might call it a barge , a sea-going barge ) on the end of 100 metres of line , that was being towed . |
9 | If the before I come to go past it he would cut back in and and climb across even if if the next car then back in again you 're just going , you start out of line |
10 | So while he 's looking for you somebody could run out and kick the tin , there you go and fetch him , and if he 'd caught anybody and when you kicked that tin the other , well you could all go and hide . |
11 | You never know , through you I might found out the mistakes I made . ’ |
12 | Underneath them I 'll write down what to do . |
13 | and then if that 's okay with you I 'll come back in about two weeks ' time and |
14 | She 's a very conceited woman , Pete the adulterous told me she was a very conceited woman and er Neil says I I I 'd have to talk to him to him about this , she could n't discuss anything with him she would lay down the law , that was how it had to be and I said no I said Gerry and I , I had no hesitation , as I said , in putting the boot in and Brenda and Dave take the same the attitude to children that you let them first of all when they 're small , you have to tell them no like you do not |
15 | Cos I was , I said to the youngsters yesterday , I says I 'll tell you what we 'll do , we 'll just take your trainers tomorrow , or we 'll go down the town and put your competition paintings in and then we 'll come round and get the bus up home , and then I thought ah the hell with it we 'll go on down to York Street |
16 | And given you know just just a bit of help , be it financial or or erm housing or or help in terms of of contact and support and er you know having having people round you you can call on . |
17 | That 's that 's it until I know or I know what I 'm actually looking for in it I can run around chasing me tail all day which |
18 | One day someone is going to feel so sorry for her he 'll end up marrying her . |
19 | what we 're likely to be short of it seems to me we could end up being twenty four thousand pounds short at the end of the year . |
20 | I can not stand it any longer , if someone does not come to me I will give up and be miserable for ever and perhaps go home of my own accord , write or wire to Uncle C. and say you are coming at once pleas darling , and come on Saturday or I will give up altogether and always wretched . |
21 | Er , thank you Chair , for the opportunity to introduce the paper which I do briefly bearing in mind what I , I see are all the pressures on you which will go on into the afternoon . |
22 | At 78 he still refused to stop work : ‘ My advice to parents is not to give up to the rising generation the place you have occupied in the world so long , because there are some who are very near to you who would turn round and put you out homeless and penniless . ’ |
23 | I feared that without him I would batten down the hatches of the physical part of me and crawl back inside the shell which I had built around myself in the three years before he blew through my life . |
24 | The clue is , of course , that if Archer 's coat was powder-stained his killer must have been someone known to him who could get up that close in the deserted night street where he met his end . |
25 | If he thinks the doctors are giving up on him he 'll give up himself |
26 | But as his eyes grew accustomed to it he could make out a hand protruding from the open lounge doorway . |
27 | Through it you can look out on some trees . |
28 | I never saw that it was quite in balance , but you know you just , it 's a case , if somebody else does n't do something and you ca n't stand looking at it you will get on and do it , |
29 | If the choice of bearing is between a sixteen double O four and a six double O four , it may hang , for us it may hang on whether , er , whether we can localize the sixteen double O four |
30 | The factories will will man well between us we 'll work out the manning . |