Example sentences of "[subord] [adv] [pron] [vb base] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Sometimes these losses do not amount to anything important but more often than not they include the loss of some article of sentimental value which creates a strong emotional response . |
2 | New houses may be built , but more often than not they compromise the setting of the house without generating funds to restore it . |
3 | More often than not you get a refund cos of course you have personal allowances for a whole year but you 've not er not er lived a whole year as often as not and therefore there usually spaced over the twelve months and you 've paid a bit too much tax if you 've died in the course of the twelve months . |
4 | Now more than ever we need the help of our friends ’ . |
5 | If we do n't , although now you get the estate you ca n't , of course , inherit the title . ’ |
6 | On board the steamer the two of them were talking about what would happen to the title if Lord Woodleigh was to die before they had any children , and Lord Woodleigh said — Sven Hjerson 's ears heard it — although now you get the estate . |
7 | Nevertheless , following ( 6 ) unc and , in an overall sense , the off-diagonal elements therefore become progressively smaller , until eventually we obtain a matrix in which the off-diagonal elements are all vanishingly small : i.e. a diagonal matrix of which the diagonal elements are the eigenvalues . |
8 | Perhaps see Tony tomorrow cos presumably you get a bit of commission . |
9 | A step up here , a step down there until perhaps you reach the door of the room from which , although it is locked and empty , you can hear shuffling footsteps . |
10 | It would be galling to lose your job because of a dispute with a customer or client , when your employer regards you as a capable performer , but this can occur if somehow you offend a person or organisation whose business is valuable to your company . |
11 | If ever they lose the ability to scavenge energy , and put it to use in repairing their own fabric , then they are said to be dead ; and they begin immediately to fall apart . |
12 | And that can work to your favour because if ever you have a problem , then you know . |
13 | It , no , I mean that was always my plan if ever you need the money |
14 | And if ever you see an actor on stage with a deaf-aid that is not integral to the plot — be suspicious . ’ |
15 | Unlike parish churches , they are rarely open except at service times , so if ever you see the door of a chapel open — when it is being cleaned or the organist is practising — be sure to go inside . |
16 | If ever I get the chance I would love to take up sky diving and roam through the Amazon jungle ( especially while it 's still around ) to collect undiscovered plants for medical research . |
17 | If ever I meet a woman who says ‘ give me time ’ again , I shall become a Carmalite ! ’ |
18 | ah tut , tut , tut , I 'm doing the tour not you , cos here we have the plate I bought for Paula correction not Carla , Paula , there you go , with a P , you 're P , which she probably do n't like anyway with the nuts in |
19 | Actually it 's easier once you 've been done cos then you have an appreciation of what 's |
20 | If therefore we examine the effect of the tax , on the rental of capital , the expression for the change in ( ) becomes ( from Eq . |
21 | the formula assumes that at any er as as of the first of April , half the work has been done on all erm files then outstanding , we 've gone into this before , where er we think that that 's er er a correct statistical way of erm dealing with things , if therefore you cut the number of er files which are going in , then erm , er I take it if you 're cutting the number of stage two files which are being passed over , and that 's the area where you 're most fighting at er at time we hope , and it has a very , very considerable impact on workload for next year . |
22 | I wo n't murder you tonight , unless perhaps I set the house on fire . |
23 | Last time er it was er free distribution , so they needed someone to , workers for that and Sikh temple offered their services and er , I think they did the job very well because mostly we get a lot of volunteers round and er , many times I went their there was quite a big queue , er five or six people were serving at the same time . |
24 | The key attribute functionally determines other attributes , because once we know the customer number we know the name , address and other attributes of that customer . |
25 | Such a dismissive attitude , which fails to see research as part of a professional task , seems to me unhelpful because whenever we make a decision , it is based on assumptions and values . |
26 | I wo n't make love to you ever again and that is giving you a fighting chance because now you know the outcome in advance . |
27 | ‘ She made a good job of it too , ’ Alec explained , adding like a good Scot , ‘ and of course there 's a small benefit to me because now I draw a rent allowance . ’ |
28 | We 've also approached Nottingham Evening Post who 've expressed an interest in taking it on , but again we still have n't got a meeting , so I intend ringing them both this week , and stressing that we need to get a move on because really we need an issue out by March . |
29 | Because here you have an opportunity to go launch yourself onto a self employed erm platform and can not provide a better platform for that and I would say that would n't I he 's thinking . |
30 | If the relatives are able to go to the mortuary or viewing room and be with the person who has died for as long as they feel it to be necessary , then they are more able to start absorbing the fact of their loved one 's death , because again they have the evidence in front of them . |