Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb mod] [verb] [pron] [prep] [num ord] " in BNC.
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1 | I 'll leave it till next week . |
2 | I 'll leave it till next week ! |
3 | If only I could see him before next week . |
4 | I can bring it in next week and play it really loud to the whole class I shall say this is Sarah and Dee where 's Tina Turner then . |
5 | ‘ I am leaving with no animosity at all and I feel confident I can find something for next year . |
6 | I tell you what you 'll give 'em till next Tuesday and if it do n't come by then you still , you can just cancel it save up |
7 | So my said , Ooh you know what if it does n't you you know you 'd have none for next term sort of thing I said well I 've got quite a few for next term still . |
8 | Smith told them : ‘ If you play really well against what looks like a near full-strength side , some of you will face them in next week 's Test and others will go higher in the national rankings . ’ |
9 | erm it might be an id if you can find them for next time |
10 | Sometimes you can turn what at first seems a mess into a triumph , with a little imagination . |
11 | We should leave it until next year and make certain . |
12 | Well we 'll leave him till last if he 's got |
13 | Give us a ring Nottingham three four three four three four we 'll send them by first class post and we 'll put need your postcode . |
14 | Now the tickets are four quid each , you can get 'em on the door , but if you 'd like two tickets , phone us on , we 'll send 'em by first class post , we need your postcode , give us a ring now , if you 'd like two tickets for the grand charity dance , modern , old-time and sequence featuring Phil , resident organist at the Tower Ballroom Blackpool . |
15 | And I ring up B H and I say , I 'm sorry about Tuesday night , but I 've got this guy that wants to see me , it 's really good , and she 'll say , alright , you 're starting off , O K , off you go , we 'll rearrange it for next week . |
16 | We could put you on next week . |
17 | It was pitch dark in the stable and , even with the burning sticks of jharo we 'd brought from upstairs , we could see nothing at first . |
18 | ‘ Perhaps we can bring it in next year , ’ said the head . |
19 | Thank you everybody who said they would do them for next year . |
20 | If it is readily intelligible so much the better ; but it is far more important that it should yield its meaning accurately than that it should yield it on first reading , and the Legal draftsman can not afford to give much attention , if any , to euphony or literary elegance … . |
21 | If it is readily intelligible , so much the better ; but it is far more important that it should yield its meaning accurately than that it should yield it on first reading , and legal draftsmen can not afford to give much attention , if any , to euphony or literary elegance . |
22 | He knew that the platform was there , but in the nightside blackness he could see nothing at first . |
23 | William says both his parents were riding enthusiasts and he got put on a horse at the age of three … his mother used to ride for Britian in the sixties and she 's encouraged him to compete … it used to terrify him at first and he never dreamt he 'd be good enough to compete … |
24 | He gives me £54 a month and I have to pay all the bills out of that It used to bother me at first , it does n't now . |