Example sentences of "[adv] just a [noun sg] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | He reported that Marlon Brando refused to play scenes with him during the shooting of Mutiny on the Bounty , although it 's never been quite clear if this story is n't perhaps just a bit of blarney from the Irish hellraiser . |
2 | Freedom , we now notice , is not always a higher ideal than those with which it competes , nor is rationality necessarily just a matter of self-interest . |
3 | Effects were kept to a minimum , mostly just a touch of reverb on the occasional guitar part , although the band admit to a growing interest in outdated analogue floor pedals . |
4 | And given you know just just a bit of help , be it financial or or erm housing or or help in terms of of contact and support and er you know having having people round you you can call on . |
5 | ‘ Because , ’ said Damian Flint , ‘ when antagonism springs up between a man and a woman , it 's really just a fight for supremacy . |
6 | The move was really just a change for change 's sake — I was simply bored to tears by it all . |
7 | Really just a point of clarification on one popular matters that erm Mr Thomson raised about er limits of settlement . |
8 | It 's a well-founded Dales village , mentioned in the Domesday Book , with a fascinating and somewhat turbulent , if bizarre history Cotherstone Castle , which loomed over the confluence of the rivers Tees and Balder , is now just a heap of rubble . |
9 | They were in what had been a walled garden and was now just a mass of rubble . |
10 | It is true that today 's speakers , not knowing the origins of generic he , may regard it as just a feature of grammar . |
11 | The innocent pre-pump strainer or filter — seemingly just a block of foam that keeps grit from jamming the pump — can be quite controversial . |
12 | There was a hint of Scottish accent in the voice and maybe just a hint of Scotch on the breath ? |
13 | Is it then just a matter of fashion , of the times in which we live ? |
14 | Seventy per cent of it is going into farmer 's pockets , right , even on goods like m m manufactured goods , we pay V A T on er manufactured goods and that V A T pays for our contribution to the European Community and most of that contribution , about seventy per cent of it , goes to farmers tt erm , right so the next economic costs to European Community right are fourteen point nine billion alright that 's the size of the dead weight loss that 's the inefficiency right , of agricultural support right , losing fifteen billion dollars a year , right , just going down the er , the Swanny okay Just a couple of point just before we er before we close . |