Example sentences of "[pers pn] [coord] [vb base] [pron] [adv prt] [prep] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Once the core units are engaged you can pile in alongside them or form them up beside the core units to block enemy attacks from the sides .
2 Just as I was myself going to be killed , the village people managed to save me and take me up to the mountain , but I had lost too much blood and died anyway .
3 I hoped she would n't make a big production out of the delivery upstairs , but just in case she did I thought I would n't go anywhere where she could see me and point me out to any of the owners , so I left through the front exit gates and found the actors ' bus with its Mystery Race Train banner and faded inside into the reassembling troupe .
4 Gust of warmth , beer and music rushing out to meet them and suck them in towards the bar .
5 It must be one of the major frustrations of being a veterinary surgeon that you can never convince your patients that you are on their side and are working tirelessly to save them and help them back to full health .
6 and she says she sat , she sat er still you know with her arms folded and all like that and she says , oh she says I think you er collect the books and stamp them and put them back on the shelves and she said they all laughed , but she got the job in opposition to er , a few others you know
7 We have kept this fish in the office brackish tank for a number of years without breeding success , and Derek has undertaken to find out how to breed them and write it up for PFK .
8 The tiny parrot was a thrilling novelty , and before long every visitor to the Australian colonies was attempting to catch them and bring them back as souvenirs .
9 She does n't avoid the painful issues that divide us — but , as few writers can , she makes us laugh at them and bring them down to size .
10 For a start , he kept losing the notes , and then , when he had managed to find them and set them out on his desk , he seemed to lack the will to start work on them .
11 The characters from the two novels carry their ontological status with them and pass it on to those they engender .
12 If they appeared likely to do so he would then map out a strategy and advise students or co-workers on how to refine them and carry them through to fulfilment .
13 Those luggers , as Denholm said , are hopeless windward sailors but in this case it will be directly astern of them and carry them down towards the Kásos Strait to the east of the easternmost tip of Crete . ’
14 We check the statements , file them and send them on to the band along with our commission invoice .
15 Just on the floor at the front here , would you people just pick up one or two of the things that you have in front of you and hold them up above above your heads please .
16 You are to search out the traitor Raphael and , when you find him , kill him or bring him back for me . ’
17 Would release embarrass him or cut him off from that obscure membership of the masculine club ?
18 I 'll have it out of him or turn him over to the press gang .
19 He began to speak out loud over the sound of the copious running water ; he congratulated himself for not crying in public , he congratulated himself for not getting hurt , for not letting himself be assaulted on the way home , for not letting anyone corner him or get him down on the floor or up against a wall but for keeping walking instead .
20 In the end I had to go up to him and bring him back to the fire .
21 With a sigh , she lifted her arms to reach him and pull him down to her , and the sheet , like her resolve , slipped away .
22 We , Rosencrantz and Guildenstern , from our young days brought up with him , awakened by a man standing on his saddle , are summoned , and arrive , and are instructed to glean what afflicts him and draw him on to pleasures , such s a play , which unfortunately , as it turns out , is abandoned in some confusion owing to certain nuances outside our appreciation — which , among other causes , results in , among other effects , a high , not to say , homicidal , excitement in Hamlet , whom we , in consequence , are escorting , for his own good , to England .
23 John likes to keep the horses separate so that they do n't kick each other , but Hopscotch often jumps into Milton 's paddock to keep him company ; and sometimes if the weather is bad , one of the children 's ponies is turned out with him , otherwise Milton , who is a bit of a softy , will hang around by the gate in the hope that someone will take pity on him and take him back to his warm stable .
24 Why did n't he take that with him and put it in for a minute , for god 's sake .
25 What is clear is that we need another ball control , distribution player , it is unfair for Macca be responsible for us all the time and besides teams can do what Ipswich did to him and mark him out of the game in the forward areas .
26 As she screamed , she felt arms grab hold of her and pick her up off the floor .
27 She felt them lift her and take her over to the low stone wall beside the glimmering field of water-chestnuts .
28 You know it might land on her her bed , see if it landed on our bed at least you can chuck the blankets off and protect her and take her out of the room , but when she 's in her own bedroom in a single bed you ca n't , you ca n't do things like that .
29 In fact , looking back , I ca n't think of anyone who ever understood her , except you , and I wish you would come and see her and take her out of herself .
30 ‘ Now pay her and get her out of here . ’
  Next page