Example sentences of "[pers pn] [adv] [vb -s] [prep] the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 In early 1958 he received a stream of well-placed visitors during his fortnightly trips to the capital .
2 Public subscriptions provided a replica of Davies 's statue in Barry Docks and his now stands at the end of Llandinam Bridge , in sight of his former home .
3 oh theirs just drags along the floor
4 She only lives around the corner . ’
5 Having gone through all the arguments such as ‘ he does n't really mean it ’ , and ‘ he loves me really ’ , she finally leaves with the support of the police , particularly the WPC .
6 It will all depend on the choice to be made by the national legislatures , and in the case of countries which make the third choice the employee 's option not to transfer may give the worker no more than he or she already has under the Mikkelsen doctrine i.e. the option of going over or resigning from employment with the transferor .
7 She do n't help out or nothing — she just sits on the bench , or wanders round looking at things , but I think she likes it .
8 She just stares at the floor and rocks .
9 Cos in the afternoon she does catering from the pub and then the evening she just works behind the bar .
10 Its reputation was lifted in the sixteenth century , when Marguerite de Navarre came here and ( perhaps ) wrote some of her Heptameron , as a respite from the rigours of the cure , before the atrocious weather — in the prologue she quickly complains of the rainfall in Cauterets — drove her down to Sarrance .
11 these two ladies and this old biddy , she 's right , she always gets on the train first and all the businessmen and all the kids hat her
12 One nurse described how she always knocks at the door of a private room if there is a terminally ill patient in case she should catch them crying .
13 She always comes to the house .
14 She genuinely cares for the boy and is determined to save him from a life of crime .
15 She usually builds on the shores of an estuary and there she sits devotedly , seldom leaving the nest .
16 For example , Geertz 's wife is introduced in the article 's opening section as a companion in his rigorous journey , but she rapidly disappears from the narrative .
17 So eh , no she still goes over the downs with me you know .
18 She 's strong , forthright and does n't mind who she upsets — yet she still survives at the top of her profession .
19 Catriona Stewart sells her patch boxes to some of the most exclusive shops in the country , yet she still works at the kitchen table ‘ with meals , toys and people all around ’ .
20 Now retired and living in Cotherstone , she still glows at the memory of parties thrown by the Thwaites and the Fawcetts .
21 I think she still lives in the parish and commutes in .
22 She also points to the importance of performance in first year examinations as a means of identifying potential non-graduates , who may need further support if they are to be successful .
23 She also points to the danger of a new tendency to give attention to affluent active newly-retired people , which only serves to concentrate ageism on older , poorer people .
24 She also helps with the care assistants , giving them something to do when they are not dealing with me .
25 Yet if she plays at telling the truth , she also plays with the telling of the truth .
26 The paradox in Leapor 's response to her experience is that she is firmly aware of its physical nature , yet she also insists on the intellectual and spiritual dignity of women .
27 She also writes for The Sunday Times
28 She also writes for The Sunday Times
29 The sort of independence of thought and mind so readily apparent in her own work , she also values in the work of others .
30 Would you hold on a moment I 'll just get Margaret to the phone cos she really deals with the bookings hold on a second !
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