Example sentences of "and [pers pn] [verb] [pers pn] [adv] [det] " in BNC.

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1 She got a , I think she got a bit of a shock you know she actually probably thought she was better than she was and a lot of people had been giving her a lot of pats on the back and I tell you where half of that emanated from was down the corridor .
2 Things like Fade To Black and Ironhand are untouched , and I like them rather more than the ‘ worked on ’ stuff .
3 I have been here over a week now , and I miss you very much , and I miss the fresh air and the fresh faces of all those people I so hated on the Tube and the fresh things that happened every hour of every day if only I could have seen them — their freshness , I mean .
4 left and I cut it up this morning before you got up and I could n't cut it with the scissors !
5 It was quite funny really and I enjoyed it very much .
6 What we are beginning to see in this country — and I welcome it very much — is a sharp slowdown in the rise in unemployment .
7 ‘ It 's been such a long time , and I want you so much that I could easily make a mess of this , ’ he confessed .
8 From the first moment we spoke I knew you were a girl with great sensibility , and I admire you very much .
9 and I bear them little enough ill will .
10 I am so angry with you , Lucy , and I love you so much for doing it . ’
11 Oh , Ross — I 've been so stupid , and I love you so much , ’ she whispered , burying her face in his shoulder .
12 ‘ I have been teaching Connections since it first came out , and I enjoy it very much , and so do the vast majority of our students . ’
13 Sorry No , bulimia , where you eat anything , and you puke it up all up ,
14 When we went to John Lewis 's in , in High Wycombe , they got some cheap fabrics on in lace or , or fine material , and you know I very much now regret not getting some , because I want to dress up , remember I had a , a lace cover , a fitted lace cover on my kitchen table
15 They were worlds apart and she knew it as much as he did .
16 And she told me how many shifts you work , the different groups in this home and what type of clients , how to treat them . ’
17 and we enjoyed it so much and it was only ten pound for ten days ,
18 and we enjoyed it so much , we went and asked my mother for some more money , we stayed another week and then when we got back to London er Mrs said I think we better go , you know , get away from London in
19 er it got terribly out of hand in the 19th century ; people throwing eggs from the top of the tower , the choristers and the people from the town blowing trumpets and all sorts of things , really riotous. er so it was reformed in 1844 er no more rotten eggs then and we do it very much as then ; facing the rising sun which was beautiful
20 You got ta guess the weight of this Christmas pudding that 's a great big Christmas pudding , and they tell you how many j erm jars of this and how many tins of that and how many pounds of sugar and and you 've got ta guess the weight .
21 I think about the last ones that was taken there was an old man Ramsey that died at er Dalvaine , and they carried him out that way .
22 I think I mean it was interesting cos someone said earlier about people coming in I mean once you get them in I mean I always feel it 's like the pantomime each year which is an amateur pantomime yet the actual people coming in to see that I mean it 's well in the ninety per cent 's and you talk to people when they come to see the pantomime and ver invariably the the mum 's or dad 's say no I do n't normally come to theatre but I come to the pantomime and they enjoy it very much and when you talk to them they can say well what you think of it ?
23 We corresponded , and he taught me almost all I know about the conductivity of electricity and its effect on those bodies through which it passes .
24 And he drove them home all the way , presumably with the help of his dogs .
25 It was Alan 's wife who entered him for his first rally and he enjoyed it so much he decided to continue .
26 Both Hitch and Morton had worked for Plummer for more than ten years and he trusted them as much as anyone in his organisation .
27 It was a right-to-left turn up the hill and he hit it perfectly all the way — or so I thought .
28 We sat down at a table and he poured me out some tea .
29 Mhm I wan na go to because then I get a and it takes me about half an hour to get home .
30 A picture rose in her mind of Dawn enfolded in his arms when they were alone in his surgery , and it tormented her so much that she got up hurriedly and put the little dog in a cage to await Robert 's collection .
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