Example sentences of "[adv] [pers pn] [verb] [verb] [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Right I 've got no questions for you Mr , thank you very much . |
2 | Er cos er my son-in-law I mean I put on the form right I 've got no children right . |
3 | At first everyone had been smiling , thinking how right I looked holding the baby . |
4 | right I want to see the homework , those that have n't got it etcetera . |
5 | Luckily I managed to get a job with a small fit-up touring company — playing small theatres in the provinces , living in digs , away from the spotlight and very badly paid . |
6 | Luckily I managed to grab the abseil rope firmly enough with both hands to stop ) . |
7 | Next week 's vital for most of them — luckily I 've got a job to go to . ’ |
8 | I have had people ring me up at weekends and luckily I 've had the stuff and taken it back . |
9 | Eventually I managed to find a page torn from a local bus timetable which showed the Province of Parma . |
10 | E eventually I did get a job . |
11 | Rather I wish to use the experience of West Ham as a means to examine the nature of working-class political intervention . |
12 | It would be unfair to say that I have formed a low view of the Foreign Office ; rather I have formed the view that Foreign Office activities have in some way become totally disconnected from the human race . |
13 | Even better I thought to find a society that automatically lets its existing investors know when a better deal becomes available . |
14 | Then she breathes out and gives a real smile — one of those big things that brightens her face like a starburst — and I see she 's been frightened , and I sigh , and suddenly I 've got a lump in my throat and I 'm trembling and I do n't think I can move away from this wall . |
15 | ‘ I remain confident about my ability to do the business at Premier League level , and suddenly I 've got the chance to prove this self-belief is not misplaced . |
16 | Suddenly I start ripping the poster off the wall , ripping it into bits . |
17 | Suddenly I wanted to hear the sound of human voices and to feel the warmth and comfort of loved ones . |
18 | Suddenly I have twisted the gun out of his hand — but it flies away from us across the ground . |
19 | But apparently I have to feel The Bump three or four times a day or be found guilty of Not Being Involved as a Father , or worse still , of this darkly Freudian offence called Denial . |
20 | Naturally enough I had to play a couple of games for the long-suffering Jewish Chronicle photographer ( who must have nightmares about having to snap me on his deathbed ) . |
21 | Interestingly enough I 've got a book er back in my office about things like T V comedy and situation comedy and stuff like that and also y'know kind of variety sort of comedy with sketches and s y'know Two Ronnies , Monty Pythons and stuff erm would that be of any use to you if you were to borrow it ? |
22 | ‘ If only I 'd recognized the signs of Bubbleshake contamination when I met him . |
23 | ‘ If only I 'd known the truth about you , Shiona , there would have been no need for me to keep running away from my feelings for you . |
24 | only I 've finished the letter |
25 | Only I 've got no money for the fare . ’ |
26 | Only I had to carry the can for it . |
27 | Only I have closed the shop for siesta , and I wanted to talk to you about my husband . |
28 | And anything will be worthwhile — the loss of Tara , the loss of Fergus — it will have been worthwhile if only I have woken the Enchantment of the Beastline . |
29 | I enjoy the more wishy-washy concepts — I wish perhaps I 'd had the chance to do a physics and philosophy option — and it seems to me that when we do things like quantum physics nobody bothers very much with the concepts that that presents — they just tend to give you all the theory . |
30 | ‘ Well , you know , perhaps I 've made a mistake . |