Example sentences of "[adv] [pers pn] [vb base] [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Slowly I get out of the bag . |
2 | It is carried against , and so I come back to the new erm section being proposed by Professor on anti-semitism and concurred by the convenor , Dr , and put it to the assembly . |
3 | And so I set out on the long journey back to Thornfield . |
4 | And so I set off across the field . |
5 | At four and a half thousand pound of sales we start to pay extra fift in fact at four thousand pound we start but it 's only a small bonus so I home in on the bigger one . |
6 | So I work on down the lambing quite a few times . |
7 | So I look up from the jigsaw I had for my birthday . |
8 | So you go along to the next D and there 's no Os there , so you come down , D , no Os , so you keep going along the lines and every time you get to a D you stop |
9 | So you sit down with The Hook and ask him about what it was like in the '60s in London , when he was lionised by Van Morrison , The Animals , Peter Green and all the gut-bucket R&B bands , but he just laughs and says it was fun . |
10 | So you nip down to the shop , hand over six quid or so with bad grace , choose — somehow — one set from the enormous and multicoloured collection on offer , zoom home and spend a happy ten minutes snipping , cranking and generally trying to avoid poking your eye out . |
11 | So you start off on the basis that you will be entitled to a new lease under the 1954 Act provided you take the necessary steps within the time scale set out in the Act . |
12 | All your horses are out , put your men up they walk round the ring and at seven o'clock you move off to the heath to train your horses . |
13 | So we set off down the steep easterly flank of the mountain , alongside a spectacular waterfall that incredibly was still partially frozen in June . |
14 | So we set out across the open grassy slope that led on up towards the forest . |
15 | So we come back to the one explanation which resolves every difficulty : the ‘ discovery ’ made by the monks of Canterbury in 1120–21 , as the canons of York at once realized , was the moment of their enlargement . |
16 | So we come back around the circle to the capital side of the balance of payments , and the operationally interesting question : for how long can we expect the world 's savers to make up our domestic shortage ? |
17 | And so we end up in the paradox of a system which invokes the criterion of historical consciousness as a means for distinguishing the ‘ primitive ’ from the , civilized' but — contrary to its claim — is itself ahistorical . |
18 | So we go back to the house . |
19 | So we split up towards the end of the season and I then went over to the States . |
20 | So we start off with the first one that you have , this C W , that stands for company worker . |
21 | As their numbers grew so they spread out from the areas still occupied and the abandoned warrens slowly began to be reoccupied . |
22 | I think this is because they do n't practice being feminine with the boys around and so they get on with the work more . |
23 | Erm it allows domestic farmers to produce their so they go on to the world market and they 've got everybody else these things |
24 | And so they come back to the land of Moab and make their way to Bethlehem . |
25 | For me it 's just feel and the longer I stay out on the range , the more damage I do ! |
26 | tourism in West Sussex I mean what would happen to that is just one example er on a broader level , the County Council is working with the European regions to promote West Sussex in Europe and what would happen to that , the only conclusion we could draw is that these policies would crumble and to er seriously affect West Sussex and finally I come back to the point that , that I will keep making , if I ever get the opportunity , namely the cost of this exercise . |
27 | Normally you walk back through the wreckage trail to find the mark in the ground or on trees or buildings beyond which there is no other mark , and then you have to match the marks with the appropriate damage to the aircraft . |
28 | In the morning providentially we set off for the frontier , and there to my great delight I saw the familiar face of Mr Derrick Robinson , Rhodesia 's Assistant Commissioner of Police , standing beside a BMW motor car which was to convey me to Salisbury . |
29 | So anyway we come up to the roundabout and she never . |
30 | Just when you expect them to lash into some wicked rockabilly they come out with the Radio 4 theme music soundalike of ‘ Mala Femmina ’ . |