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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 You just , I just leaves it on the side .
2 Instead , she guides him to check his suggestion and when he realises that he is not successful , she skilfully involves him in the final solution to the problem .
3 I 'm eight and a half years old and disgusted that my mother has to come with me to see A Hard Day 's Night when usually she just sees me to the edge of the estate and across the main road .
4 She always cooks it in the plastic bag though
5 She says that she usually watches them on the River Thames , she 's travelled to Gloucestershire because she 's never seen them nesting before .
6 When she weans them on to meat she usually feeds them from the kill before she herself eats .
7 She also upbraids me about the work I am engaged in at Schloss Hartheim .
8 She also cuts it with the kitchen scissors !
9 She then whispers them to the Sixer while the next Brownie has her turn .
10 All you have to do is to be willing to co-operate with the hypnotherapist as he gently takes you through the relaxation exercise to the hypnotic state .
11 The book had been written in haste , he charmingly tells us in the Preface , so that the first part was already at the printers before the second part was written .
12 Well , he only puts them on the
13 he only puts them on the floor .
14 She is building the nest while he jealously guards her against the attentions of other males .
15 Over a cognac he gloomily informs us of the Japanese surrender .
16 The main accusation levelled against boundary routing is that the technology does not actually decrease overall complexity of the network , it merely shifts it from the periphery to the central hub .
17 It just drives me up the wall .
18 But he was saying you see , what 's happened is the they is n't his he just delivers them for the bloke
19 Even if we drop a shot because Jacklin makes four , it still keeps us in the Open .
20 But it still leaves us with the crucial problem that Sartre had to solve , namely how to link human consciousness with the processes of history so that the former can be said to be the agent of the latter .
21 He takes his belt to him — I try to hide him sometimes , but he always finds him in the end .
22 I bent down to do it and he always pokes me in the eye with it .
23 It always fails you in the end .
24 At the wicket he is a Roman general , unquestioning of his own ability to defeat the barbarians ; yet because the pride and haughtiness are justified by having repeatedly proved himself to be the best , one can not resent them , especially since he usually leaves them on the field of combat .
25 And a and also , I mean , it was , and it was a Panasonic one this , erm what you do , if you were doing a jacket top potato , you er would weigh the potato and , and then erm put in the weight , say it was six ounces , and all you do then is press erm jacket potato , you do n't have to put any time , it automatically does it for the time .
26 It also keeps me on the right track as well .
27 It also tells you about the communications and equipment that make working from home possible .
28 It also rescues it from the criticisms of positivist psychologists and behaviourists .
29 He also ignores her during the day when he is busy with his mathematics .
30 There is an unconditional appropriation when the goods are identified and the third person acknowledges that he now holds them for the buyer , Wardars ( Import & exports ) v. W. Norwood ( 1968 C.A. ) .
  Next page