Example sentences of "[det] [noun] [verb] [pers pn] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 That finding leads us to a shocking conclusion : a gesture is more individual than an individual .
2 But Mr. de Lacy submits that both it and the previous cases which it applied are clearly distinguishable from the instant case because they all rested upon the critical circumstances that the lender or creditor in each case left it to the principal debtor to obtain , in such a way as he thought fit , the execution of the document .
3 that experience changed him in every way .
4 But his experiences of street life in Hackney and his boxing ventures in Bethnal Green taught him that blackness presented him with a unique set of problems .
5 ‘ And with that David kissed me on the cheek .
6 Got killed when that horse kicked him in the head . ’
7 This lane takes you up a hill , past the Chapel and out of the village .
8 This index provides you with a range of facilities concerning the creation of new users , displaying details of users and the relationships between users .
9 This index provides you with a range of facilities concerning process model operations .
10 The savings on operating costs alone were immense , some experts putting it in the order of £2 million a year .
11 Mrs A. W. wrote : ‘ I would like to take this opportunity to thank you for the time and effort you have put into compiling this diet which has made a bigger difference to my weight and dimensions than any other diet I have been on … . ‘
12 I hope you will not be too disappointed and would take this opportunity to thank you for the interest which you have shown .
13 I hope you will not be too disappointed and would take this opportunity to thank you for the interest you have shown .
14 I would like to take this opportunity to inform you of the high standard achieved by your service engineer , Dick Churcher [ Healthcare Atherstone ] for his attitude and appearance whilst working at our depots .
15 THIS OPPORTUNITY PROVIDED ME WITH A WELCOME BREAK FROM THE PURELY BOTANICAL WORK TO WHICH I WAS ACCUSTOMED .
16 This case reduces them to a single principle , the ‘ neighbour principle ’ , which emerges as part of the ratio decidendi of the case .
17 The Prince is also very keen on deer stalking , another pull to keep him in the Highlands for as long as he can manage .
18 But another sister followed me at the Dowsons when I left to get married .
19 The striking of the half hour alerted me to the incoming tide of darkness .
20 But neither should we enable this sympathy to blind us to the greater truth that more persons suffer , many fatally , from corporate crime than ‘ conventional ’ crime .
21 This differentiation puts us in a place of desire and of choice .
22 Lady Constance visited some suffragettes imprisoned in Holloway gaol , and this experience transformed her into a public figure with a single-minded burning cause .
23 This description introduces us to the tramp and gives us a rough picture of him .
24 Suddenly the events of the last few hours gripped him in a violent despairing spasm .
25 This study provided us with an opportunity to identify some of the myths that predominantly unskilled workers hold about life in their work environment .
26 Briefly explain what the result of this experiment tells you about the function of the title in this poem ( see p. 56 ) .
27 CPRW believes this review provides it with a major opportunity to influence the Board 's future direction .
28 But , while these points may be reasonable , and some of them may be true , this attempt to embed them in a general theory or schema seems unhelpful .
29 This episode leads me to the idea that at the physical level , there is a need for a philosophy to overcome disasters and fear , and also to help that majority of people who do not fulfil all their biological needs , and who have to sublimate them .
30 Some organizations see it as an extension of their production process , others as the means by which their product or service is brought to the attention of the marketplace .
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