Example sentences of "and [adv] [pers pn] [be] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 There was nothing so cosily malicious , once it was mutually accepted , as dead love , and besides it was plain Dotty had a thing going with Fairchild .
2 After the race , Ibn Fayoud moves all his horses to Bill and suddenly he 's big buddies with Butler .
3 Fucking , fire 's this gun at him point blank and he goes and he stands there like this , and he , he stood there and he goes running round the corner sort of thing and then he goes he ca n't of missed from that fucking distance you know , and its that distance and er , in the , in the car , the mate goes , the mate sort of till he passed out , and he goes bring it to me , he goes , and its still alive , he goes , but matey in the front goes oh my he goes , I knew you 'd fuck up he goes and so they 're all blanks you
4 We we tried to do as much as we could we drove from erm Colorado right the way round California up through Utah and stuff and so it is some parts of the desert are very boring .
5 And so it were good propaganda this er this , people were saying , Well they 're prepared to go to Russia and fight the Russians to re re you know release our lads , they 're trying to capture .
6 one of the criticisms or possible criticisms of the M R C figures was that these were all patients who had been entered into superficial bladder cancer studies and they do n't therefore re represent all because people are selected to go into the trial and perhaps they are lower risk patients than others and in fact I believe that the recurrence rate in the M R C studies are lower than you would expect for er superficial bladder cancer in general .
7 Well there 's no question but which therapists and people of medical profession have come across cases of people who have indeed been scarred for their whole lives and and found it very difficult to maintain trust and relationships and and be able to achieve their potential as a result of the sorts of situations that they endured , and perhaps we 're more understanding about those sorts of areas of the human need to be able to express anxiety and to feel that to express fears is is not something that 's going to overwhelm people that are around us , so that adults who are in the care of children , be they teachers , or parents , or child care workers , can allow children to express their feelings so that they do n't need to hold on to them and thereby increase the fears that they have .
8 ‘ It 's amazing what you learn and basically it 's good fun .
9 Because in that paper there is a passage where Trivers says , if my theory is right , and basically it 's this Trivers Willard thing he was talking about , that parents and offspring will be in conflict about parental investment , he says , if my theory is right and if parents discriminate investment on the basis of offspring success , then he makes two predictions .
10 If he 'd gone to the crematorium mortuary with Alan , there would have been a blank in my mind , as I had never seen it , and anyway it was thirty miles away .
11 And thus it was that glamour had arrived for our heroine .
12 He helped me with the goats and with the work in the cornfields , and soon we were good friends .
13 Demolition work has been postponed indefinitely and tonight thee are new moves to give the building protected status .
14 He laughed and kissed her again , and somehow it was another hour before the last of the doughnuts and her third cup of tea were consumed and he decreed that the colour had returned to her cheeks and they could leave .
15 And probably it was cold weather they would have two or three coats er you know .
16 And now they are good food .
17 Even her first husband she had regained from that dreadful hinterland of marsh and bog and storm cloud : and now they were good friends , she and Edgar , in the sunlight , harmlessly friends , and on some subjects ( the National Health Service , the pathology of multiple murderers , the ethics of reporting violent crime ) had struck up alliances that excluded , that increasingly and dramatically excluded , her husband Charles .
18 she said and now I 'm finishing school I still need them sometimes for a meal and then I 'm going out in the W R V S shop , something like that in the chain ,
19 I used to be 20 stone and now I 'm 15 stone , which is n't bad .
20 And now it 's all panic again , and it always will be — until we mend our ways and Arnold Bros ( est. 1905 ) graciously allows us back into the Store as better , wiser nomes ! ’
21 The rumour here is that he killed MacQuillan and now he 's committed suicide . ’
22 So his wicked sister 's vanished and now he 's big man on campus .
23 Of course , one time his reflexes had been off , and now he was recycled organs .
24 and here she is four seconds later .
25 And here he is driving trucks around the countryside !
26 Body repair , and then they 're given minute mediastinal amounts of the essential amino acid which would otherwise poison them , they 're given really tiny amounts of it to keep them healthy .
27 and then she 's life-long member .
28 And then she perked up in the evening , I think she wanted to play tennis and then she was alright Friday .
29 Since , I mean when it was on the back I thought oh I do n't know how you get used to each since he took the evening out and then he 's different bloke
30 anything in my life and then I am that boy
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