Example sentences of "and [adv] [pron] [vb base] [art] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Dandelions are natives of Europe and Asia , and botanically they form a difficult and much varied group with many microspecies , but for the herbalist 's purposes , these are of no moment . |
2 | It probably results from the break-up of treponemes in response to the penicillin , with release of substances into the bloodstream and locally which have an inflammatory potential . |
3 | You are happily filling your basket with the week 's groceries when you turn the corner into the next aisle and suddenly you see a roaring lion , its teeth glistening , open-mouthed and heading straight for you . |
4 | The first is that three nuns from the same order work in the largest of the villages , Kormakiti , and so we provide a useful link . |
5 | Our theological understanding is that our top priority should be to worship God and so we encourage the small groups to give time to this first . |
6 | And so I follow a nervous , |
7 | Politically we are on a hiding to nothing in the long run and so I guess the only satisfactory way forward would be to leave badgers completely alone and compensate farmers in full for badger-related losses , including consequential losses . ’ |
8 | And so I see no particular problem about the E two in relation to local needs housing policy . |
9 | And so I have an English voice because I come from that background . ’ |
10 | That 's one of the very important advantages of this election result , and personally I think the Social Democrats in Germany made a great mistake by being equivocal on this issue . |
11 | All of the eruptions except Krakatoa happened in the northern hemisphere , and together they show a clear pattern of behaviour . |
12 | But he helps her get over her hang-ups and together they start a loving relationship . |
13 | Each poem is a verse-epistle , as it were , and together they constitute a whole collection of correspondence . |
14 | And thus I pass the tedious Winter on , |
15 | They then repeat the last but one segment with the last segment and finally they repeat the whole sentence . |
16 | Never vary from the routine , and always you have a subconscious life-line to pull you through when dealing with difficult clients . |
17 | ‘ The English are great lovers of themselves , and of everything belonging to them ’ , wrote the Venetian diplomat Andrea Trevisano at the end of the fifteenth century ; ‘ they think that there are no other men than themselves , and no other world but England ; and whenever they see a handsome foreigner , they say that he ‘ looks like an Englishman' ’ and that ‘ it is a great pity that he should not be an Englishman ’ , words echoed exactly in 1521 by the Scottish scholar John Major ; while the German knight Nicolas von Popplau , who visited England in 1484 , found a people who regarded themselves as the wisest in the world . |
18 | The Venetian author of the Italian Relation of England commented specifically on the English sense of national pride , and presumably was thinking of attitudes which he encountered generally and not merely the point of view of the more literate : ' … the English are great lovers of themselves and everything belonging to them ; they think that there are no other men than themselves , and no other world but England ; and whenever they see a handsome foreigner , they say ‘ he looks like an Englishman ’ ' ( 35 , pp.20–1 ) . |
19 | These factors have affected profoundly the composition of families — quite literally , what relatives people actually have — and hence they form the essential building blocks from which family support is constructed . |
20 | Experience has been both positive and negative : ( a ) negative — often students feel inadequate in that other students always have more knowledge than them , and typically they have no firm home base ; ( b ) positive — the combination of electronics and computing , for example , is seen as highly beneficial by employers . |
21 | They were simply buying time , came out with a white paper that meant absolutely nothing and now we see the full effects of it . |
22 | We got married last month , and now we have a tiny flat here . |
23 | ‘ We have sites in France and the UK and now we have a strong presence in Germany — a cohesive team fighting to achieve the same objective . ’ |
24 | OH dear and now we have a poor man 's Roger Rabbit scenario with a spot of bump , grind and white trash in stockings from Kim Basinger . |
25 | And now we have the solid-state valve complete with LED to give us that warm glowing feeling ! |
26 | Peter faced them with flint , and now they make a splendid feature , with lots of interesting things at eye level . |
27 | Their crown was peddled around Europe and now they have a German Royal family — including a quite absurd Queen who writes sentimental novels . |
28 | And now they have an added attraction a few weeks ago they danced to the music of the 14-piece Cleveland Orchestra in a first for the group . |
29 | Americans love to go over the top and now they have the perfect excuse . |
30 | I made my decision a long time ago , and now I have no rightful place in their lives . |