Example sentences of "[noun pl] [conj] [prep] [art] [noun pl] [pers pn] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The week will feature various lunchtime workshops and speakers and in the evenings we are having entertainments , such as films , a women only meeting/disco and a lesbian and gay night at a local nightclub .
2 ‘ They break the rules because Bawden cares less for rules than for the things he has to say about the feel of a summer morning , the watery sunshine of an April afternoon , or the flurry of a February snowstorm . ’
3 Outside the hospital , ASAP students lead peer discussions through several short video triggers developed by ASAP , or they create their own trigger role-plays about their own lives or about the stories they 've heard in the hospital and jail .
4 The children saw not much of him because all day he was out at his duties and in the evenings he retired to his study to convert his lectures into books .
5 Similar disasters are scattered piecemeal all over Britain , on bomb sites and over the slums they were built to clear .
6 Yet a paradox remains , for what we relate to in actual experience remains our interpretation of a presentational continuum coloured as much by our own senses as by the realities they perceive .
7 At both the Girl Guide meetings and in the Rangers I was able to add to the knowledge of First Aid and General Nursing I had began when in 8th Hastings Brownies .
8 Some pictures , Victorian engravings for instance , may be more useful for telling us about Victorian tastes , fashions , and expectations than for the scenes they portray .
9 When the excitement had died down I thought about my family , of all their help and sacrifices over the years and of the hardships they had undergone to bring us all up .
10 In the hitherto unpublished Leeds University evaluation of the 1991 Key Stage One National Curriculum Assessment , teachers rated the tasks they gave to children as rather more challenging than did observers , and were rather more generous than the observers in their estimates both of the frequency of open questions and of the opportunities they gave pupils to volunteer opinions .
11 Even were he able to persuade her to marry him , somehow he could not envisage her being content to live on a ranch among a whole lot of strangers and without the luxuries she took for granted .
12 Because we can not question their authors , autobiographies can be tantalizingly elusive : but in compensation , what they omit or include is in itself evidence of the attitudes of the writers and of the readers they had in mind .
13 These taxes are levied not on particular households or firms but on the goods they buy or sell .
14 On the one hand they are ‘ employers of labour ’ and managers because of the functions they perform , the authority they possess and the rewards they enjoy .
15 Studies of such wavelengths , shorter than about 104 nanometres , have been difficult , but they are important to chemists because of the actions they can have on atoms and molecules .
16 They captured several outposts and with the arms they gathered were able to equip larger forces .
17 It also has probably the finest and most ancient native pines in Scotland , venerable trees whose gnarled , weatherbeaten habit has more in common with old oaks than with the conifers we are used to seeing .
18 Murray Pugh was described by his best friend as universally popular , both with fellow students and with the children he taught.A man has already been charged with his murder .
  Next page