Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [vb past] [prep] [noun] [conj] " in BNC.
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1 | and er I mean and these were three young girls , they only just started to work and yet they 'd got a car and as soon as they finished they they were going on this picnic |
2 | Yet there are still quiet corners and delightful places to see on the Costa Blanca … and all so easily reached on drives and excursions for those who want to get away from it all . |
3 | She obviously thoroughly disapproved of holidays and spent all her time polishing the plastic . ’ |
4 | They made love on the cool marble floor of the terrace , and much later went to bed and slept in each other 's arms for the first time in months . |
5 | And then he just never went to school and they maintained they 'd got a private . |
6 | It still only failed by inches and you can argue , that , finishing farther in front of Gyr and Blakeney than at Epsom and Ascot , Nijinsky ran to form . |
7 | For Jews , there is no subject more profoundly freighted with fear and with hope than Israel . |
8 | So saying , she once again burst into tears and , crossing rapidly to George , threw her arms around his neck and stretching up on her toes , began to kiss him with a fervour which shocked him . |
9 | I also deeply sympathized with George because Lennie had practically spoiled his life yet George never seemed to complain . |
10 | Though not in poetry , whose influence now chiefly came from America and Canada . |
11 | There have been many different attempts to explain these pressures , in terms of capitalist crisis ( or the fiscal crisis of the state ( O'Connor , 1973 ) ) ; or the state acting as a leech on productive sectors of the economy ( most strongly argued in Bacon and Eltis , 1976 ) ; or simply in terms of monetarism ( outlined in Gamble , 1984 , pp. 145–9 ; Leys , 1983 ) . |
12 | The two actors reputedly almost came to blows and ended the film not talking to each other . |
13 | We then all got into taxis and we went off to the Coconut Grove at the top half of Regent Street where we spent until the small hours of the morning . |
14 | A year ago she 'd have been able to race him out to the ketch , maybe even climbed on deck and dived off … |
15 | She held her breath and opened the door a crack — then almost fainted with relief as the steward enquired politely , ‘ Will you be requiring tea or coffee in the morning ? ’ |
16 | Ken erm y you 've asked some questions , I 've actually seen the I M R O letter and can I say that there are two questions in the I M R O letter to Mr Maxwell and Bishopsgate , which quite categorically asked for accounts and also details of the ownership structure coming out of Liechtenstein . |
17 | As he no longer wrote to relatives or old war comrades , he explained stiffly , ‘ I 'm expecting word from my daughter in London . |
18 | She no longer wrote to Ferdinando nor to anyone else except Ellen and these were dutiful enquiries after Oreste 's health with reports of her own and Pilade 's . |
19 | But the purely cultural process did operate in the experiment , and therefore probably occurred in nature as well . |