Example sentences of "[coord] [pers pn] [vb -s] [prep] a [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Or attempt to explore with a Central European Jew the precise nature of the ties that he or she feels with a culture which down the centuries has been responsible for so much persecution and pain .
2 In the biography of every individual he or she begins in a state of infantile dependence which ‘ is characterised by a persistence of both primary identification ( the emotional state of the infant in the womb ) and the oral incorporative or ‘ taking in ’ attitudes ( contributed by breast feeding ) as the infant 's chief means of object-relationships after birth ’ ( Guntrip , 1961 ) .
3 If you are not related by blood , or were not legally married to the deceased , you can not inherit from him or her if he or she dies without a will .
4 When the actor represents the play , he or she draws upon a variety of verbal and non-verbal resources .
5 ‘ Lola is very powerful and very sensitive and she goes through a lot of changes .
6 all I could is , I 'll get Tracy summat to wear and you got time , and she picks like a blouse , she 'd pay a hundred pound for one .
7 We stand holding each other , and she shivers like a butterfly and her tears trickle down my skin .
8 Three o'clock in the morning , bopping through a weird limb-jerking dance routine , and she looks like a child at playschool .
9 Mum said of him : ‘ He 's gone meshugge ( daft ) … the shiksa comes from nowhere , we know nothing about her , or her family , and she looks like a shmatte ( rag ) . ’
10 We learn with them that he designs furniture ( as Harry Hoffman did ) and she works in a gallery of primitive art on Madison Avenue , but only in the end do they reveal their names to each other .
11 ‘ He is thinner than Hess , he is stupider than Hess , and he thinks like a peasant .
12 And he talks like a translation . ’
13 His change of bank with the same g sends his nose up and he climbs into a barrel roll .
14 So he 's walking down the street , trying ah , trying ah to get his mind off this and he gets on a train .
15 And er I gets him down and I gets him into the stable , and I gets all the clothes off him and he gets into a bag , a bran bag , more bags and lay down and covered himself , and I hung his clothes round the boiler fire .
16 I confess to him that I have never done Kipling Groove and he launches into a celebration of Arthur Dolphin 's famous classic .
17 Unfortunately , Joan catches Victor slightly off-balance and he falls against a wall , bruising his arm slightly .
18 It fills him with strange satisfaction to think that while the great illumination of the Market Square is quite invisible from this point , the little lamps of Iron Green can be seen glowing through a gap beyond Albert Road , It is many years now since he has visited the lower end of Odborough , for his legs will not carry him up and down the hill , and he growls like a dog if anyone suggests a car .
19 His father , also Norman , who died a year earlier , in 1772 , is portrayed in Allan Ramsay 's portrait as if he might have been Bonnie Prince Charlie — in wrap-around plaid , curly white wig , a gold-hilted claymore at his left hip , right hand outflung , and he stands in a landscape of rock , sky and water .
20 The last seven lines on three rhymes break the pattern of units of sense on single rhymes as the meditator signals by means of the present tense : " lufe chawnges my chere " , the possibility of transformation to a state where he can hear the melody to which love dances , and he ends with a statement of faith , " be my lufyng , I lufe may syng " .
21 I just thought poor guy , I mean he was somebody who thought he 'd overcome food addiction , drink addiction , drugs addiction and he looks like a spider .
22 He is my wife 's brother and he works as a journalist with a newspaper in Hue .
23 ‘ Because he is rich and he lives on a desert island like this when he could be in Paris … ’
24 My old man 's a dustman he wears a dustman 's hat he wars cor blimey trousers and he lives in a council flat .
25 And he lives in a house on Suez Street ,
26 The friend is called Bobby and he lives in a slum near the city centre .
27 and he lives in a chateaux in France .
28 And he adds in a magazine interview that appears today : ‘ Everyone has deserted her . ’
29 Patrick Standun 's book ‘ Lovers ’ has on its cover a priest and a semi-naked woman in bed and it opens with a character using a sock for purposes he claims he learned from ‘ The Dark ’ .
30 This is a public right of way for walkers and it continues as a track alongside Loch Coulin , where camera enthusiasts are often fortunate to find a moored rowing boat posing for the foreground of a perfect picture .
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